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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... th soliloquy may </1:30><1:31> have been an addition to the play by Shakespeare after the performances of 1601 and the construction of the original ...
... ry offers no clue to the source of this description. It has been suggested that Shakespeare may have had in his mind Sir Walter Raleigh's attack upon the fort o ...
... b> ground</b>] <sc>Marshall </sc>(1875, pp. 193-4): <p.193> “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 ...
... n> <cn> <sigla>1885<tab> </tab><sc>macd</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>macd:</sc> <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i> + magenta underlined</hanging><para>2743+11<tab> </tab>< ...
... bout it at all?</small> If the word ‘frontier' has the meaning, as the <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i> says, of ‘an outwork in fortification,' <small>its ...
... ir Francis Vere which returned home on March 18. There can be little doubt that Shakespeare is here alluding to those events' (Dover Wilson).”</para></cn ...
... r one. Moreover, there is mislineation at [3.4.52 (2435-6)] in Q2, showing that Shakespeare was not very careful about his speech headings. It therefore seems r ...
... . . . <b>dies.</b>] <sc>Stearns</sc> (1865, pp. 75-6): <p. 75>“How Shakespeare may have acquired his medical knowledge it is, of course, impossible ...
... Aposthume: f. An <i>Imposthume</i>; an inward swelling full of corrupt matter.' Shakespeare uses the word in two other places, <i>Ven</i>., 743, and <i>Tro</i>. ...
... n if other were wanting—that Hamlet's madness is sheer feigning, and that Shakespeare fully intended him to not only to be entirely in possession of his s ...
... ssive faculty: as in the nervous old French of Amyot in his Plutarch: with whom Shakespeare was much familiar.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1813<tab> </tab>v ...
... craven</i> and a villain else.'—The verb to <i>craven</i> is also used by Shakespeare and others.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1864a<tab> </tab><sc>glo ...
... uestions of honour. Polonius has punned on <i>tender</i> at 1.3.102-8 [569] and Shakespeare plays on 'tender heir' and 'tender chorl' in <i>Son</i> 1..”< ...
... eebles the antithesis.</para> <para>“It seems clear that what Hamlet and Shakespeare are first asserting, even though the words do not precisely say this ...
... e has caused confusion to critics and actors alike. Critics have concluded that Shakespeare was ‘only half-saying what he meant.' Pope and Johnson and Mal ...
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