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631 to 640 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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631) Commentary Note for line 3432:
3432 A ministring Angell shall my sister be

    ... fallen innocent. It would not have been in accordance with the fine feeling of Shakespeare to have made the brother utter those sublime words over the corpse o ...
632) Commentary Note for line 3434:
3434 Ham. What, the faire Ophelia.

    ... in his stern business in life) his tragedy would not have been unmitigated. But Shakespeare has taken pains to make it utter and com plete; it is most systemati ...
633) Commentary Note for lines 3436-37:
3436 I hop't thou should'st haue been my Hamlets wife,
3437 I thought thy bride-bed to haue deckt sweet maide,

    ... ;I ought (<i>i.e. </i>was <i>bound</i>) <i>to have </i>done it.' But we find in Shakespeare [cites 3436-7].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> </tab>v187 ...

    ... anging>v1877 &#8776; Abbott (<i>minus </i>&#x201C;We still . . . But we find in Shakespeare . . . &#x201C;)</hanging><para>3436-7<tab> </tab><b>I</b> . . . <b>m ...
634) Commentary Note for line 3444:
3444 <Leaps in the graue.>

    ... ngs; but this theory has been cast aside by critics of any insight or standing, Shakespeare has taken too much pains to show that Hamlet is not insane; the theo ...

    ... he pirate saw at the Globe, is sufficient testimony; I think that this was what Shakespeare himself intended. It follows therefore that both stage-directions, o ...

    ... way of thought and action, who is scheming to kill him by a dreadful trick. But Shakespeare rfuses to belittle him or let us despise him. And he refuses to sent ...

    ... wash his failings. For those of us who to any extent &#8216;believe in' Hamlet, Shakespeare makes things difficult in this scene. It is tragedy not sentimental ...
635) Commentary Note for lines 3448-49:
3448 Of blew Olympus.
3449 Ham. What is he whose {griefe} <griefes>

    ... not a thought for Ophelia in his excitement after the killing of Polonius; but Shakespeare gives us indirectly to understand that grief on her account overtook ...
636) Commentary Note for line 3450:
3450 Beares such an emphesis, whose phrase of sorrow

    ... n <i> wonder-wounded</i>.&#x201D; [an oratorical, exaggerated expression [that] Shakespeare uses also in [<i>Ant. </i>1.5.68 (600)] &#8212;In the following [sc ...
637) Commentary Note for line 3452:
3452 Like wonder wounded hearers: this is I

    ... Bad Quarto, &#8216;<i>Hamlet leaps in after Leartes</i>.' Q2 and F are silent. Shakespeare cannot have intended Hamlet to leap into the grave and so become to ...
638) Commentary Note for line 3453:
3453 Hamlet the Dane.

    ... not in the light of <i>a priori</i> theory but of the facts themselves just as Shakespeare presents them. In every case Shakespeare will explain himself utterl ...

    ... ry but of the facts themselves just as Shakespeare presents them. In every case Shakespeare will explain himself utterly, in every scene and passage, to entire ...
639) Commentary Note for line 3457:
3457 {For} <Sir> though I am not spleenatiue <and> rash,

    ... >s.</i> Violent haste. As <i>spleen,</i> or anger, produces hasty movements, so Shakespeare has used it for hasty action of any kind. This is given as the 5th s ...

    ... n.</i> 2.1.148(762) &amp; 5.7.50 (2660)] These instances show sufficiently that Shakespeare intended the word to bear this sense; but we do not find it so used ...

    ... his present love for her at the grave. In this case we could wish not only that Shakespeare had referred to such a state of affairs during all the interim, but ...

    ... regular line, and modern editors normally follow suit. It may be, however, that Shakespeare deliberately inserted a short line here in keeping with the short-te ...
640) Commentary Note for line 3458:
3458 Yet haue I {in me something} <something in me> dangerous,

    ... his present love for her at the grave. In this case we could wish not only that Shakespeare had referred to such a state of affairs during all the interim, but ...

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