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81 to 90 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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81) Commentary Note for line 248:
248 Queene. Good Hamlet cast thy {nighted} <nightly> colour off

    ... <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>248-51 <tab ...
82) Commentary Note for line 252:
252 Thou know'st tis common all that liues must die,

    ... ll</b> . . . <b>die</b>] <sc>Anders </sc> (1904, rpt. 1965, p. 214): &#x201C;If Shakespeare had any one passage in view [for <i>2H4 </i>3.2.41 (0000)] it was pr ...

    ... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>252-3 <tab ...
83) Commentary Note for line 254:
254 Ham. I Maddam, it is common.

    ... m<sc>clr</sc></hanging> <para>254-67<sc><tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 1813, Coleridge's notes, transcribed by Er ...
84) Commentary Note for line 258:
258 Tis not alone my incky cloake {coold} <good> mother

    ... ara></cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>258-67 <tab ...
85) Commentary Note for line 274:
274 To doe obsequious sorrowe, but to perseuer

    ... <b>obsequious</b> ] According to <sc>Spevack,</sc> <i>Harvard Conc</i>. (1969), Shakespeare uses <i>obsequious</i> eight times, <i>obsequiously</i> once, and <i ...

    ... OED</i></sigla><hanging><i>OED</i></hanging><para>274<tab> </tab><i>OED</i> has Shakespeare as 1st user of <i>obsequious</i> in the funereal sense, but as early ...
86) Commentary Note for line 275:
275 In obstinate condolement, is a course

    ... /sc> (ed. 1987): "grieving, lamentation. Apparently introduced into English by Shakespeare and/or Marston in his <i>Antonio's Revenge</i> (5.6.58), this word d ...
87) Commentary Note for line 291:
291 You are the most imediate to our throne,

    ... ab> </tab> <sc>Harrison</sc> (ed. 1957): &#x201C;As is obvious from the play, Shakespeare regarded the throne of Denmark as elective. Critics have unnecessar ...

    ... about the fratricide that Claudius changes his intention about the succession. Shakespeare shows Claudius not as a usurper, but as duly elected. Later, facing ...
88) Commentary Note for line 292:
292 And with no lesse nobilitie of loue

    ... the commentators contend for. To <i>impart toward </i>a person, is not English; Shakespeare however, is so licentious in the use of his particles, that were tha ...

    ... eaning the honour of being heir-presumptive. But it may well be doubted whether Shakespeare would have used <i>nobility</i> with this meaning; and nobility, in ...

    ... . 1982): &#x201C;Though variously glossed, this word should give no difficulty. Shakespeare often describes as 'noble' feelings and attributes of mind that are ...
89) Commentary Note for line 293:
293 Then that which dearest father beares his sonne,

    ... (&#167; 82): &#x201C;<b>A </b>and <b>The</b> omitted in archaic poetry. . . . Shakespeare rarely indulges in this archaism except to ridicule it: [quotes seve ...
90) Commentary Note for line 294:
294 Doe I impart {toward you for} <towards you. For> your intent

    ... ot occur elsewhere [in Sh.]. It may be that by the time he had reached the verb Shakespeare regarded <i>nobility</i> as its object, forgetting that he had begun ...

    ... of neighbour love, I impart myself to Master Goursey'; and it is possible that Shakespeare used <i>impart</i> for 'impart myself'. So Johnson interpreted it.&# ...

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