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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... ution while it seems to relieve the heart.' That it was the belief, at the time Shakespeare wrote, that sighs were injurious to the blood and affected the healt ...
... /sc> (1934, 2:304): <p 304> “It is evident, again, that at 4.7.126 Shakespeare misled both the Q2 compositor and Scribe P of F1 by writing ‘i ...
... have not been able to find this reading in any copy, but <sc>Theobald</sc> (<i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, p. 119) conjectured ‘imbaited.' As this conjectu ...
... ecause I believe it to be one of the most carefull elaborated scenes, as far as Shakespeare is concerned, in the whole play. The bare skeleton of it in the Quar ...
... ut a button on the point. <i>Bate, abate, </i>and <i>rebate</i> are all used in Shakespeare with a similar meaning. See [<i>MM</i>], note 47.”</para> <pa ...
... en)), so as to ‘hit, but hurt not' (([<i>Ado</i> 5.2.13 (0000)])). Though Shakespeare does not refer to foil <i>buttons</i>, Dover Wilson is mistaken in s ...
584) Commentary Note for line 3129:3129 Requite him for your Father.... ecause I believe it to be one of the most carefull elaborated scenes, as far as Shakespeare is concerned, in the whole play. The bare skeleton of it in the Quar ...
... nd free from all contriving, will not peruse the foils.' Yet I acknowledge that Shakespeare evidently wishes, as much as possible, to spare the character of Lae ...
... composition as regards his intended vengeance for a father's death, in all that Shakespeare has here achieved.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> </tab>v ...
586) Commentary Note for line 3132:3132 I bought an vnction of a Mountibanck... nks</i>'), the word is used in the same sense. In the two other places in which Shakespeare uses it ([<i>Com.</i> 1.2.101 (0000), and 5.1.238 (0000)]) it is les ...
... st should burst in the proof.' To <i>prove a gun</i> is a phrase still in use. Shakespeare perhaps did not use the word <i>burst</i>, because in his time it wa ...
588) Commentary Note for line 3158:3158 Quee. There is a Willow growes {ascaunt the} <aslant a> Brooke... “There</i> ;” a fault of no little size in good writing, which Shakespeare could not fall into. But this is not all: By reading “<i> co ...
... n the Gertrude doc.</para></bwk> <bwk><para>Bradby, G[eoffrey] F[ox]. <i>About Shakespeare ad his Plays.</i> London: Oxford UP, 1926. No index. Includes a chro ...
... > (ed. 1939): “The Queen's speech is lyrical rather than dramatic. It is Shakespeare the poet that speaks rather than Shakespeare the dramatist. But it i ...
... yrical rather than dramatic. It is Shakespeare the poet that speaks rather than Shakespeare the dramatist. But it is a masterpiece of its kind and any dramatic ...
... er Wilson robustly observes that a December drowning could hardly have supplied Shakespeare with his setting, an imagination familar with the Avon scene could w ...
... p. 283> <p. 284> to see at a glance how much better the F1 reading is. Shakespeare is not likely to have written ‘hoary' with with ‘glassy' ...
... luck to follow Q2 in [3160], though its superiority is obvious at a glance. For Shakespeare intended Ophelia to make her garland of willow, a willow-garland bei ...
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