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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 481) Commentary Note for line 2576:2576 Ham. I must to England, you knowe that.... scene 3) and his interview with his mother (Scene 4). It is quite possible that Shakespeare meant us to suppose that, while Hamlet passed through the corridors ...
... ow Hamlet knows of it has not been shown. But the quotation given suggests what Shakespeare implies, that he ‘doubted' or guessed it would be the next mov ...
... The present passage shows that he had already learned of the project—how, Shakespeare does not say, but it is easy to imagine; for Hamlet was not destitut ...
... [1825-6] and announced to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern at 3.3.2-4 [2273-5], but Shakespeare often uses the convention whereby characters can be assumed to share ...
... , got thro' all the Errors of this long <i>Act</i>, save a slight one, in which SHAKESPEARE is no ways concern'd, committed by Mr. POPE, in a <i>Note</i> of his ...
... ued in the Introduction (pp. 14-19) that their removal is part of a revision by Shakespeare of the later part of the play. (1) Hamlet's plan to postpone his rev ...
... </sc> (ed. 2006): “not in F. Edwards argues that this passage was cut by Shakespeare as part of a revision of the later part of the play; he claims that ...
... l enginer of phrases.' Heywood has <i>mutineer</i> for ‘mutineer,' though Shakespeare has it both ways; and the word <i>engineer</i> does not seem to have ...
... ing a town (the word was later used for the explosives buried in such tunnels). Shakespeare had drawn on Holinshed's description of the use of mines at the sieg ...
... pressed what seemed to be genuine contrition. I confess I do not understand why Shakespeare thought it necessary to add anything here to what he had originally ...
... mother . . . [258] what changes of grief and bitterness, love and anger has not Shakespeare set his Hamlet to ring on the one word! Nor are these the last herea ...
487) Commentary Note for line 2583:2583 Come sir, to draw toward an end with you.... big</sc> (ed. 1857): “<i>Steevens</i>, in a remark on this place, blames Shakespeare for having been unfortunate in his management of the story of this p ...
... . [4.9.30-2 (2733, 2734)]; <i>Ibid</i>. [4.14.138 (2993)]. These instances from Shakespeare alone, and they could easily be multiplied, will suffice to bring in ...
489) Commentary Note for lines 2586-2586+1:2586+1 {and Guyldensterne}.... assumption that, rather than have the King ‘enter the Queen's apartment', Shakespeare must have intended a new scene to begin here (<i>SFF</i>, p. 322).&# ...
... aunt,' <i>AYL</i> [2.1.15 (621)]. <small>The verb is two or three times used by Shakespeare in the similar sense of frequent (as the French hanter).</small> ...
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