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141 to 150 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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141) Commentary Note for line 508:
508 Ophe. I shall {the effect} <th'effect> of this good lesson keepe

    ... ty which her brother had uttered! Critics have failed to see the art with which Shakespeare here delineates the self-conceited, shallow-principled character of ...
142) Commentary Note for line 510:
510 Doe not as some vngracious pastors doe,

    ... 0-14<tab> </tab><b>pastors</b> . . . <b>reed</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "Shakespeare has lost control of his sentence. He has allowed &#8216;the puffed ...
143) Commentary Note for line 514:
514 And reakes not his owne reed. {Enter Polonius.}

    ... ] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "takes no notice of his own advice (to others). Shakespeare does not use <i>rede</i> elsewhere, though it was common enough in h ...
144) Commentary Note for line 521:
521 The wind sits in the shoulder of your saile,

    ... riter, under the initials A. L., considers that the allusion in the text proves Shakespeare to have been a &#8216;thorough sailor.' In the second note following ...
145) Commentary Note for line 523:
523 And these fewe precepts in thy memory

    ... t;&lt;p. 47&gt;</para> <para>&#x201C;The word <i>beware</i> is used by Lyly and Shakespeare in these passages. There is further resemblance to the advice of Pol ...

    ... (1596, C3-4); Florio, <i>Second Fruits</i> (1591, ch. 6, pp. 93-105); and in Shakespeare himself, <i>AWW</i> 1.1.54 ff. The tradition goes back ultimately to ...

    ... the precepts themselves were recurrent. Several were proverbial maxims, though Shakespeare characteristically phrases them afresh. Only a few of the closer par ...

    ... 'Apparel makes the man' (A283) and 'Who lends to a friend loses double' (F725). Shakespeare stages a similar occasion in the opening scene of <i>AWW</i> when th ...
146) Commentary Note for line 528:
528 Grapple them {vnto} <to> thy soule with hoopes of steele,

    ... steele,' it is far from improbable that Malone was right in his conjecture that Shakespeare wrote, &#8216;<i>hooks</i> of steel.'&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigl ...

    ... all>this makes the figure suggested by &#8216;grapple' the very reverse of what Shakespeare intended; for grappling with hooks is the act of an enemy and not of ...

    ... is a good example of Malone at work.The various commentators also exemplify the Shakespeare wars.</para> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2006<tab></tab> <sc>ard3q2</sc> </si ...
147) Commentary Note for line 529:
529 But doe not dull thy palme with entertainment

    ... </sc> (1860, 1: 306): &#x201C;<i>Dulls</i> occurs thirteen lines below. May not Shakespeare have written <i>stale?</i>&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1865<tab> ...
148) Commentary Note for line 539:
539 {Or} <Are> of a most select and {generous, chiefe} <generous cheff> in that:

    ... iscuss this <i>locus impeditus</i> with an earnest hope that the next editor of Shakespeare will give, &#8216;Are most select and generous, chief in that,' &#82 ...
149) Commentary Note for line 568:
568 Vnsifted in such perrilous circumstance,

    ... tab><b>circumstance</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "affairs, circumstances. Shakespeare often uses this word without discriminating between singular and plu ...

    ... e] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;matters, circumstances. Shakespeare often uses the singular where modern usage would dictate the plural. ...
150) Commentary Note for line 569:
569 Doe you belieue his tenders as you call them?

    ... ccording to <i>OED</i>, whereas the legal use of the word goes back to 1542-3. Shakespeare has Old Capulet say &#8216;I will make a desperate tender Of my chi ...

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