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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... >clrl</sc>ec</hanging><para><sc>2701-30<tab> </tab> Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...
... ;D<small>r</small>. Johnson further states that in the journe voyage to England Shakespeare merely followed the novel as he found it, as if he had no other < ...
... , are likewise found in <i>The Hystory of Hamblet</i>.'” </n.> but Shakespeare never adhered to followed a novel but where he saw the story contrib ...
... an incident in the old story & there it is used merely as an incident, but Shakespeare saw how it could be applied to his own great purpose, and how it was ...
502) Commentary Note for lines 2712-13:2713 Farewell deere Mother.... 6;The cherub Contemplation.'</para> <para>“It can hardly be doubted that Shakespeare was familiar with this tradition and refers to it here and in severa ...
503) Commentary Note for line 2718:2718 King. Follow him at foote,... n Q2, and the interesting question arises whether this was done deliberately by Shakespeare or is due to the compositor. Mr Percy Simpson has claimed that lines ...
504) Commentary Note for line 2728:2728 Our soueraigne processe, which imports at full... ;<i>mandate</i>: ‘Where's Fulvia's process? <i>Ant</i>. [1.1.28 (39)]. <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1890<tab> </tab><sc>irv ...
... er, or from this; all were accented <i>cónjure</i>. Instances are found in Shakespeare both ways: and Hall has <i>conjúr'd</i>, for raised by conjurat ...
... where, and perhaps, as Mr. Stone suggests in his edition of the play, formed by Shakespeare by analogy with agree.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1891<tab> </t ...
... o has <i>congree</i>. It seems to me not improbable that <i>congrue</i> is what Shakespeare wrote in each place, and that the editors of the Folio, twenty years ...
506) Commentary Note for line 2731:2731 For like the Hectique in my blood he rages,... an Hectick, or continuall Feauer.' This is the only passage where it occurs in Shakespeare either as substantive or adjective.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...
... I may fare (or whatever may happen to me), my joys will never have begun.' That Shakespeare could use ‘were ne'er' for ‘will never have,' is in cons ...
... tudy of Hamlet, pp. 193, 194, has the following note on this scene: ‘That Shakespeare intended to refer to some particular expedition in this passage I ha ...
... still the extent of it does not answer to the description in the text. In 1573 Shakespeare was only nine years old; in 1580, when Walter Raleigh joined Grey's ...
... short speech) has no parallel in the Quarto of 1603; it was evidently added by Shakespeare on the revision of the play, a circumstance which confirms me in the ...
... e, was ‘in the kingdom of Norway' (<i>Itinerary</i>, 1907, 1.124), and if Shakespeare thought the same, the heightened proximity of Norway might, as G. Sj ...
... n its northern shore; and if some recollection of the earlier venue stayed with Shakespeare even while he transferred the scene to Elsinore, it might help him t ...
... up, pp. 94-6). But it is not profitable to seek geographical precision for what Shakespeare is content to leave vague. The play is consistent with itself in mak ...
... ivation of the F1 and Q1 from a shorter stage manuscript <i>certainly edited by Shakespeare himself</i>. About this see also Del. p. 118. Note 6.]</para></cn> < ...
... & Marshall, ed. 1890): “<i>Softly</i> is used in many other parts of Shakespeare for ‘gently,' ‘leisurely.' The Clarendon Press edd. quot ...
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