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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... an</i>. Spenser has <i>eyen</i> often (cf. the poetic form <i>eyne</i>, used by Shakespeare several times for the sake of rhyme) and <i>foen</i> = A.S. <i>fan</ ...
... ve been told by the Gentleman that she ‘hems and beats her heart'. Or did Shakespeare leave it either to his personal instruction or to the actor's own di ...
... h so <i>larded</i> with my matter'; the word in this sense is generally used by Shakespeare in a figurative sense.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1899<tab> </t ...
... ms rash—Q1, Q, F agreeing—to adopt Pope's emendation ;did go,' lest Shakespeare may have meant a distracted allusion to the ‘obscure burial' [ ...
... gets repeated or inserted out of place. Dowden retains not, on the ground that Shakespeare may have meant a distracted allusion to the “obscure burial&# ...
... 2;Q1, Q2, and F1 agreeing—to adopt Pope's emendation ‘did go,' lest Shakespeare may have meant a distracted allusion to the ‘obscure burial' o ...
... ion to the ‘obscure burial' of Polonius. We can be certain, I think, that Shakespeare did mean this. Dr Greg writes ‘Ophelia is suddenly struck by t ...
535) Commentary Note for lines 2784-86:2785-6 ter, Lord we know what we are, but | know not what we may be. 27852786 God be at your table.... omengro's Chavi, <i>or Baker's Daughter</i>.' Compare Thoms, Three Notelets on Shakespeare (London, 1865) p. 108-112 and Neil ad loc.”</para></cn> <cn> ...
536) Commentary Note for line 2790:2790 All in the morning betime,... is very ancient in this country. See <i>Bourne's Pop. Ant</i>. I.48. quarto ed. Shakespeare makes Ophelia sing (<i>Hamlet</i> lines cited]. But, according to th ...
537) Commentary Note for line 2799:2799 by Cock they are too blame.... this oath, also, are wrapped in obscurity. It occurs in several old plays, and Shakespeare has it in at least two other places. The most likely account represe ...
... this oath, also, are wrapped in obscurity. It occurs in several old plays, and Shakespeare has it in at least two other places. <small>Probably it was a corrup ...
... sion in F1 (and Q1); Parrott/Craig boldly speculate: "It is characteristic that Shakespeare retained in his ms. the phrase he must have heard when this old song ...
...
2806-7 but weepe to thinke they {would} <should> | lay him i'th cold ground, my brother2807-8 shall know of it, | and so I thanke you for your good counsaile. Come2808-9 my | Coach, {God night} <Goodnight> Ladies, {god night.}2809-10 Sweet Ladyes | {god night, god night} <Goodnight, goodnight.> ...
... ke ready my coach, my chair, my jewels</i>. Dyce remarks on this passage, that Shakespeare seems to have remembered it, when he made Ophelia say, <i>Come, my c ...
... & Marshall, ed. 1890): “Dyce, in his edition of Marlowe, notes that Shakespeare seems to have had in mind a passage in Tamburlaine, part I, 5.2, whe ...
540) Commentary Note for line 2818:2818 Of his owne iust remoue, the people muddied... ea of ‘What is M<sc>udd</sc><i>ed</i>, or M<sc>udd</sc><i>led</i> up.' In Shakespeare it is brought to its original spot, when it relates to a person bein ...
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