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31 to 40 of 57 Entries from All Files for "Student" in All Fields

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31) Commentary Note for lines 2375-76:
2375-6 Pol. {A} <He> will come strait, | looke you lay home to him,

    ... ishes to return; for critics tell us that thirty was no extraordinary age for a student those days. That may be, but the tone and manner of the King and Queen i ...
32) Commentary Note for line 2628:
2628 And whats vntimely doone,

    ... 8)], beginning,&#8212;'No; &#8216;tis slander,'&#8212;will readily occur to any student of Shakespeare, as favouring the insertion</small>. H.&#x201D;</para></ ...

    ...
2685-6 Ham. Not where he eates, but where {a} <he> is eaten, a {certaine} <cer-| taine> conua-
2686-7 cation of {politique} wormes are een at him: your worme | is your onely
2687-8 Emperour for dyet, we fat all creatures els | to fat vs, and wee fat our
2688-9 {selues} <selfe> for maggots, your fat King | and your leane begger is but varia-
2689-90 ble {seruice, two} <service t ...

    ... b>. . .<b> dyet</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): &#x201C;Hamlet, very much the student from Wittenberg at this point, wittily alludes to the celebrated Diet of ...
34) Commentary Note for line 2743+26:
2743+26 {How all occasions doe informe against me,}

    ... good reason is not wanting why he should have done so. At the same time, if my student, for this book is for those who would have help and will take pains to t ...
35) Commentary Note for lines 2930-31:
2930-1 Laer. A document in madnes, thoughts and {remembrance} <remem-| brance>fitted. 2930

    ... rd</sc> (ed. 1987): &#x201C;i.e. lesson (<i>OED document sb </i>2) from which a student of madness might learn much. Compare <i>The Faerie Queene</i> I.X.I9, &# ...
36) Commentary Note for line 3152:
3152 If he by chaunce escape your venom'd stuck,

    ... eturne from Pernassus: <i>or the Scourge of Simony. </i>Publiquely acted by the students in Saint John's Colledge in Cambridge. London, 1606. (STC 19310). This ...
37) Commentary Note for line 3211:
3211 Clowne.I marry i'st, Crowners quest law.

    ... at it. Blackstone only mentions the burial of suicides at cross roads, and law students are led to believe that the law was the same over all England and Wales ...
38) Commentary Note for lines 3289-90:
3289-90 Ham. There's another, why {may} <might> not that be the | skull of <of> a Lawyer,

    ... us Lovers. A Comedie presented to their gracious Majesties at Cambridge, by the students of Trinity College. Cambridge, 1632. (20692a)</hanging> <para>Much of 4 ...
39) Commentary Note for lines 3295-96:
3295-6 Land, with his Statuts, his recog|nisances, his fines, his double vou- 3295
3296 chers, his recoueries,

    ... on is a follow-up to a collection of illustrations published when Rushton was a student-at-law. Rushton points out in his Notice that the <i>Liverpool</i> <i>Al ...
40) Commentary Note for lines 3338-39:
3338-9 very day that young Hamlet was borne: hee | that {is} <was> mad and sent into
3339 England.

    ... that in the early part of the play whre he is described as a very young man, a student at the University [1.2.113 (295)].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1874< ...

    ... most of a man's life. Instances include Marlowe's Faustus, &#8216;I have been a student here these thirty years' ((v.ii.42)); the Abbess in <i>The Jew of Malta< ...

    ... lines Hamlet's increasing maturity. But if he <i>is</i> thirty, he's an elderly student, and Gertrude must be in her late forties, at least.&#x201D;</para></cn> ...

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