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21 to 30 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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21) Commentary Note for line 85:
85 This bodes some strange eruption to our state.

    ... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para> 85<tab> </ ...
22) Commentary Note for line 91:
91 Why such impresse of ship-writes, whose sore taske

    ... <i>Observations on the more Ancient Statutes,</i> p. 300, having observed that Shakespeare gives English manners to every country where his scene lies,&#x201D; ...

    ... x201C;but it is an undoubted fact that, in the only two other passages in which Shakespeare uses the word <i>impress, </i>he uses it in a sense of forcible or i ...
23) Commentary Note for line 96:
96 Hora. That can I.

    ... 17].&#x201D;</para> <para>In a LN for 617, Jenkins says: &#x201C;The play shows Shakespeare in two minds about [Hor.].&#x201D; He refers to <sc>cam3</sc>, p. xl ...
24) Commentary Note for line 98:
98 Whose image euen but now appear'd to vs,

    ... some long time and still continues, the emphasis being laid on &#8216;now.' In Shakespeare the emphasis is often to be laid on &#8216;even,' and &#8216;<i>even ...

    ... age</b>] <sc>Deighton</sc> (ed. 1891): &#x201C;semblance; not elsewhere used by Shakespeare of a ghostly apparition, though in [<i>2H6 </i>3.2.147 (1850)], &#82 ...
25) Commentary Note for line 99:
99 Was as you knowe by Fortinbrasse of Norway,

    ... slew in single combat, had ever sat upon the throne of Norway. On the contrary, Shakespeare clearly intends us to think of him, a pugnacious warrior of presumab ...
26) Commentary Note for line 101:
101 Dar'd to the combat; in which our valiant Hamlet,

    ... ion, This is surely the reason for the alteration. It was not made, however, by Shakespeare but rather by the anonymous author of the Ur Hamlet, who would have ...

    ... or early 90s. An older, Anglicized, non-theatrical form of the name was Hamnet. Shakespeare gave it to his only boy (1585-1596), thus honoring a Stratford frien ...

    ... deep involvement that each Hamlet feels in the fate of the other. Furthermore, Shakespeare repeated the device with a slain senior Fortinbras and an avenging j ...
27) Commentary Note for line 103:
103 Did slay this Fortinbrasse, who by a seald compact

    ... Both as adjective and substantive the word is</small> <small>always accented by Shakespeare on the last syllable, with one exception, [<i>1H6 </i>5.4.163 (2805) ...

    ... e Earle&#x201D;s Philology of the English Tongue, pp. 131 sqq. Some of these in Shakespeare have a varying accent, as &#8216;contract, &#8216;exile,' &#8216;env ...
28) Commentary Note for line 104:
104 Well ratified by lawe and {heraldy} <Heraldrie,>

    ... , though not be one and the same, but different.&#x201D; He therefore concludes Shakespeare wrote&#8212;by Law of Heraldry&#8212;i.e. &#x201C;the execution of t ...

    ... ranted by the other. But there are undoubtedly many compacts, not only seald as Shakespeare expresses it, but executed in all the forms of the Civil Law, and in ...

    ... l in Form are yet not ratify'd by Law; it is therefore with great accuracy that Shakespeare here speaking of this Compact and in support of it, says that it was ...
29) Commentary Note for line 105:
105 Did forfait (with his life) all {these} <those> his lands {B2v}

    ... hether the class exists or be imaginary, [. . .] It is [. . .] commonly used by Shakespeare where even the conception of a class in impossible.&#x201D;</para></ ...
30) Commentary Note for line 107:
107 Against the which a moitie competent

    ... > (ed. 1872): &#x201C;corresponding, adequate. <small>The only other passage of Shakespeare in which the word occurs is [<i>TN </i> 3.4.270 (0000)]: &#8216;His ...

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