<< Prev     1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 [11] 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 ..75     Next >>

101 to 110 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context
101) Commentary Note for line 325:
325 That he might not {beteeme} <beteene> the winds of heauen

    ... . Mr. Theobald hath given us unanswerable reasons to incline us to believe that Shakespeare wrote, &#8216;<i>That he </i>might <i>not </i>let e'en <i>the winds ...

    ... Magdalene</i> (B2), 'My parents . . . would not suffer the wind on me to blow'. Shakespeare transforms a common expression so as to suggest something uncommon a ...
102) Commentary Note for line 328:
328 As if increase of appetite had growne

    ... was proverbial (Dent, A286). Sexual desire is frequently seen as 'appetite' in Shakespeare (see <i>TN</i> 1.1.1-4 and 2.4.94-102 , <i>Ant.</i> 2.2.246-8), but ...
103) Commentary Note for line 331:
331 A little month or ere those shooes were old

    ... 1<tab> </tab> or ere] <sc>Spencer</sc> (ed. 1980): &#x201C;before. Probably Shakespeare and his contemporaries supposed the second word to be 'ever'. In fa ...
104) Commentary Note for line 334:
334 O {God,} <Heauen!> a beast that wants discourse of reason

    ... on</i> was a common one (see <i>OED discourse sb.</i> 2b), and is used again by Shakespeare in <i>Troilus</i> (2.2.116)."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></ta ...
105) Commentary Note for line 337:
337 Then I to Hercules, within a month,

    ... cules twice (Bullough 7.118, 123). Miola (<i>Tragedy</i>) argues, however, that Shakespeare may be drawing on Seneca's <i>Hercules Furens</i> (see pp. 70-1).&#x ...
106) Commentary Note for line 339:
339 Had left the flushing {in} <of> her gauled eyes

    ... 339<tab> </tab><b>left</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "ceased from leaving. Shakespeare has, it seems, combined two senses of <i>leave</i> &#8211; <i>leave ...
107) Commentary Note for line 341:
341 With such dexteritie to incestious sheets,

    ... in the Beginning&#x201D; [of the word] : &#x201C;I cannot help suspecting that Shakespeare wrote &#8216;<i>celerity.</i>'&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1860< ...

    ... h Reformation and the succession of Queen Elizabeth. W. F. Trench thought that Shakespeare and the audience of <i>Hamlet</i> would share the national view that ...
108) Commentary Note for line 355:
355 Ham. I am very glad to see you, (good euen sir)

    ... of the necessity, dear Sir, for the reasons you give: because it is plain that Shakespeare makes free with the unity of time through all his Tragedies; without ...
109) Commentary Note for line 364:
364 Hora. My Lord, I came to see your fathers funerall.

    ... ed to the court circle, about which the play seems curiously undecided . . . . Shakespeare here ignores the fact that if he has been a month and more in Denmar ...

    ... . &lt;/n. 46&gt;</para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> With elaborate funerals in mind, Shakespeare may have intended an audience to realize that it could be some time ...
110) Commentary Note for line 368:
368 Ham. Thrift, thrift, Horatio, the funerall bak't meates

    ... funeral feats (or <i>arvals</i>) are often mentioned in the sagas: but of these Shakespeare knew nothing; he is simply reporting the manners of his own time. <s ...

    ... tab> </tab>bak't meates . . . marriage tables] Holland (2008, paper at Columbia Shakespeare Seminar): Since Shakespeare's audience would have been aware that <i ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches