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1150 to 1159 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1150) Commentary Note for line 3846_384:
3846 So tell him, with th'occurrants more and lesse
3847 Which haue solicited, the rest is silence. < O, o, o, o. Dyes>
    ...  In the langauge of Shakespeare, Edward  ...
    ... a>1989<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare on Film  ...
    ... .J. Honigmann in <i>Shakespeare Survey</ ...
1151) Commentary Note for line 3848_384:
3848-9 Hora. Now {cracks} <cracke> a noble hart, | good night sweete Prince,
    ... ecause no writer on Shakespeare has take ...
    ... ecause no writer on Shakespeare has take ...
    ...  not have come from Shakespeare's pen, b ...
    ... a proven,  profound Shakespearean schola ...
    ... he placed here with Shakespeare's author ...
    ... eful emendation and Shakespeare's own wo ...
    ... than one student of Shakespeare has addr ...
    ... erhaps, regret that Shakespeare never fe ...
    ... writing these words Shakespeare had in m ...
    ... ;Gerald Massey's <i>Shakespeare's Sonnet ...
    ... oubtlessly exprsses Shakespeare's own es ...
    ... s used elsewhere by Shakespeare where we ...
1152) Commentary Note for line 3850:
3850 And flights of Angels sing thee to thy rest.
    ... ike the language of Shakespeare, which,  ...
    ... ial and mental, the Shakespearean (and g ...
    ... is creation came to Shakespeare from the ...
1153) Commentary Note for line 3851_385:
3851 Why dooes the drum come hether?
3852 Enter Fortenbrasse, {with the Embassadors.} <and the English Ambassador, with Drumme,>
3853 <Colours, and Attendants.>
3854 For. Where is this sight?
    ... multaneous removal, Shakespeare has good ...
    ... e's scaling down of Shakespeare's genero ...
1154) Commentary Note for line 3857:
3857 For. {This} <His> quarry cries on hauock, ô {prou'd} <proud> death
    ... he dogs of war.' <i>Shakespeare</i>.&#x2 ...
    ... he dogs of war.' <i>Shakespeare</i>.&#x2 ...
    ... y havock' kommt bei Shakespeare &#246;ft ...
    ... k' appears often in Shakespeare . . . <s ...
    ...  of dead game . . . Shakespere makes the ...
    ... Murder, are used by Shakespeare; and the ...
    ... ed necessary blood. Shakespeare himself  ...
    ... Which may have been Shakespeare's spelli ...
    ... e passages in which Shakespeare seems to ...
    ...  is noteworthy that Shakespeare often as ...
    ... 10). The pecularily Shakespearean use of ...
    ...  use (usually after Shakes.) fig., and a ...
1155) Commentary Note for line 3858:
3858 What feast is toward in thine eternall cell,
    ... ate use of words in Shakespeare, some of ...
    ... e passages in which Shakespeare seems to ...
    ... from a contemporary Shakespearean public ...
    ... s quoted above from Shakespeare, and as  ...
    ... nd fighting. Though Shakespeare may have ...
1156) Commentary Note for line 3869_387:
3869 He neuer gaue commandement for their death;
3870 But since so iump vpon this bloody question
3871 You from the Pollack warres, and you from England
    ... a lesson at once in Shakespearian dictio ...
1157) Commentary Note for line 3877:
3877 Of accidentall iudgements, casuall slaughters{,}
    ... e unlineal hand. As Shakespeare has here ...
1158) Commentary Note for line 3878_387:
3878 Of {deaths} <death's> put on by cunning, and {for no} <forc'd> cause
3879 And in this vpshot, purposes mistooke,
    ...  helped a little by Shakespeare's handwr ...
1159) Commentary Note for line 3880_388:
3880 Falne on th'inuenters heads: all this can I 3880
3881 Truly deliuer.
3882 For. Let vs hast to heare it,
    ... ch may well be pre- Shakespearean. Cp. p ...

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