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1021 to 1030 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1021) Commentary Note for line 3450:
3450 Beares such an emphesis, whose phrase of sorrow
    ... atorical, exaggerated expression [that] Shakespeare uses also in [<i>Ant. </i>1. ...
1022) Commentary Note for line 3452:
3452 Like wonder wounded hearers: this is I
    ... wrote the above criticism had ever read Shakespeare's &#8216;Hamlet.' One would  ...
    ... bedge</i>, 1618 (cited C.M. Ingleby, <i>Shakespeare, the Man and his Book</i>, i ...
    ... fter Leartes</i>.' Q2 and F are silent. Shakespeare cannot have intended Hamlet  ...
    ...  would have sworn he meant to die' ((<i>Shakespere Allusion-Book</i>, 1932, I, 2 ...
    ... et</i> ((1937)), argued eloquently that Shakespare intended Laertes to leap out  ...
1023) Commentary Note for line 3453:
3453 Hamlet the Dane.
    ... ory but of the facts themselves just as Shakespeare presents them. In every case ...
    ... hakespeare presents them. In every case Shakespeare will explain himself utterly ...
1024) Commentary Note for line 3457:
3457 {For} <Sir> though I am not spleenatiue <and> rash,
    ...  or anger, produces hasty movements, so Shakespeare has used it for hasty action ...
    ...  These instances show sufficiently that Shakespeare intended the word to bear th ...
    ... n this case we could wish not only that Shakespeare had referred to such a state ...
    ... y follow suit. It may be, however, that Shakespeare deliberately inserted a shor ...
1025) Commentary Note for line 3458:
3458 Yet haue I {in me something} <something in me> dangerous,
    ... 82): &#x201C;See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XVI, 238 seq.& ...
    ... n this case we could wish not only that Shakespeare had referred to such a state ...
1026) Commentary Note for line 3466:
3466 Ham. I loued Ophelia, forty thousand brothers
    ... on's Journal, titled &#x201C;On some of Shakespeare's Female Characters: By One  ...
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
    ... hy for him over the loss of his father. Shakespeare, in order to make this state ...
1027) Commentary Note for line 3467:
3467 Could not with all theyr quantitie of loue
    ... on's Journal, titled &#x201C;On some of Shakespeare's Female Characters: By One  ...
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
    ... hy for him over the loss of his father. Shakespeare, in order to make this state ...
1028) Commentary Note for line 3468:
3468 Make vp my summe. What wilt thou doo for her.
    ... e been done according to our passage in Shakespeare's time. In the north, <i>hei ...
    ... on's Journal, titled &#x201C;On some of Shakespeare's Female Characters: By One  ...
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
    ... hy for him over the loss of his father. Shakespeare, in order to make this state ...
1029) Commentary Note for line 3471:
3471 Ham. {S'wounds} <Come> shew me what th'owt doe:
    ... erstand providing we have gathered what Shakespeare has set before us in the pre ...
    ... [3480] Q2 itself, and therefore perhaps Shakespeare, is inconsistent.&#x201D;</p ...
1030) Commentary Note for lines 3472-73:
3472 Woo't weepe, woo't fight, {woo't fast,} woo't teare thy selfe,
3473 Woo't drinke vp Esill, eate a Crocadile?
    ... e to <sc>Chaucer</sc>, referring to <sc>Shakespeare</sc>'s &#x201C;Complaint&#x2 ...
    ... 201C;Complaint&#x201D; in order to show Shakespeare's knoweldge of the word &#x2 ...
    ... <i>ita </i>R Esile Fol Esile. <i>v. </i>Shakespear's Poems. &#x201C; Following t ...
    ... ><i>v</i></small><i>inegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... es are supposed to be impenetrable. Had Shakespeare meant to make Hamlet say &#8 ...
    ...  is more natural, to think &#8212; that Shakespeare sought a river in Denmark, a ...
    ... es are supposed to be impenetrable. Had Shakespeare meant to make Hamlet say &#8 ...
    ... i>eysel</i> for <i>vinegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... ed criticism on a similar expression in Shakespeare.  &#8216;Woo't <i>drink up < ...
    ... ntire army. <i>Ravin up</i>  is used by Shakespeare in <i>Macbeth</i>, and by D' ...
    ... an it is, it is very little likely that Shakespeare was read in the early Danish ...
    ...  this was the use of the word as low as Shakespeare's day, it is not to be conce ...
    ... codile </i>. I am, therefore, confident Shakespeare wrote: Woul't drink up <i>Ni ...
    ... >eisel</i> meant vinegar, nor even that Shakespeare has used it in that sense: & ...
    ... ver <i>Oesil</i> in Denmark, or if not, Shakespeare might think there was. <i>Ys ...
    ... an it is, it is very little likely that Shakespeare was read in the early  Danis ...
    ...  this was the use of the word as low as Shakespeare's day, it is not to be conce ...
    ... en written upon this word, a passage in Shakespeare's own Sonnets has not been b ...
    ... e printed. Most editors conjecture that Shakespeare meant the river <i>Yssel</i> ...
    ... Q.A. [Q1] <i>vessels</i> . In any case, Shakespeare had a river in mind, which H ...
    ... </i>or <i>Isell </i>by an Englishman in Shakespeare's time. As for the notion he ...
    ... . It was a fashion with the gallants of Shakespeare's time to do some extravagan ...
    ... all opposed to that interpretation; for Shakespeare has various other passages w ...
    ... ed criticism on a similar expression in Shakespeare, &#8216;Woo't <i>drink up </ ...
    ... rton haben 'eisel' geschrieben, was bei Shakespeare selbst in der Bedeutung 'Ess ...
    ... rte zu sagen, fest &#252;berzeugt, dass Shakespeare 'Nilus' geschrieben hat, wof ...
    ... d Ungeheuern, wovon mehrere Stellen bei Shakespeare selbst Zeugniss ablegen. Mer ...
    ... iner Erl&#228;uterung mehr bedarf, dass Shakespare nirgends Kost&#252;m und Sche ...
    ... n have written 'eisel,' which occurs in Shakespeare himself in the sense 'vinega ...
    ... y it in one word, firmly convinced that Shakespeare wrote 'Nilus,' from where on ...
    ... d horrible, from where more passages in Shakespeare himself bear witness. The re ...
    ... e it today demands no elaboration, that Shakespeare nowhere observed so strongly ...
    ... ed criticism on a similar expression in Shakespeare, &#x201C;Woo't <i>drink up < ...
    ... y or tale unknown to us, which preceded Shakespeare's tragedy; and against the l ...
    ... , vinegar; to others, wormwood. Used by Shakespeare to signify a repugnant draug ...
    ... y &#8216;vinegar,' or &#8216;wormwood.' Shakespeare uses it to express a bitter  ...
    ... e think that the following passage from Shakespeare's 111th Sonnet shows that he ...
    ... n of Ossa mentioned in the same speech. Shakespeare, in all probability, adopted ...
    ... onstruction very common in the works of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. On t ...
    ... all opposed to that interpretation; for Shakespeare has various other passages w ...
    ... ed criticism on a similar expression in Shakespeare, &#8216;Woo't <i>drink up </ ...
    ... ll>Many</small> editors conjecture that Shakespeare meant the river <i>Yssel</i> ...
    ... Q.A. {Q1] <i>vessels</i> . In any case, Shakespeare had a river in mind, which H ...
    ... </i>or <i>Isell </i>by an Englishman in Shakespeare's time. As for the notion he ...
    ... st edition, to indicate that it was not Shakespeare's word; and then, to fill up ...
    ... i>eysel</i> for <i>vinegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... usly bitter medicament much in vogue in Shakespeare's time. Could he have proved ...
    ... ean to exhuast totally, citing in proof Shakespeare's 114th <i>sonnet</i>, where ...
    ... c>Mrs. Furness's</sc> <i>Concordance to Shakespeare's Poems</i>, s.v.'up.' The p ...
    ... 's</sc> <i>Romaunt of the Rose</i>; <sc>Shakespeare's </sc> 111th <i>Sonnet</i>; ...
    ...  or tale, unknown to us, which preceded Shakespeare's tragedy.' In <i>N &amp; Qu ...
    ... y others agree to accept <i>eysell</i>. Shakespeare says: &#8216;I will drink Po ...
    ... difficult to see how it applies, or why Shakespeare should have been thinking of ...
    ... ;It is extremely doubtful as to weather Shakespeare ever heard of such an obscur ...
    ... </para> <para>&#x201C;Observe how often Shakespeare uses Nile or Nilus in [<i>An ...
    ... of the Nile and crocodile, showing that Shakespeare naturally connected and asso ...
    ... </i>or <i>Isell </i>by an Englishman in Shakespeare's time. As for the notion he ...
    ... s of course would be more poetical, but Shakespeare did not, in this scene, inte ...
    ... against it: the first of these is, that Shakespeare did not write the word; the  ...
    ... ot write the word; the second, that the Shakespearian climax is wanting. Hamlet  ...
    ... a retrograde &#8216;climax' is not like Shakespeare. But the most essential obje ...
    ... found in the word <i>up</i> a hint that Shakespeare intended t speak of the drin ...
    ... 6;it was a fashion with the gallants of Shakespeare's time to do some extravagan ...
    ... say, &#8216;too funny for anything!' If Shakespeare had known of any animal bigg ...
    ... gerly, quaff. In <i>Sonnets </i>, cxi., Shakespeare names &#8216;potions of eise ...
    ... rk play continued to be performed until Shakespeare was fifteen years old, while ...
    ... C;One of the most intensely personal of Shakespeare's Sonnets, No. cxi., contain ...
    ... o unnoticed point of connection between Shakespeare and the primitive English dr ...
    ... cellence </i>; it is in this sense that Shakespeare himself uses it in <i>Sonn</ ...
    ... ociated with challenges and the like in Shakespeare's mind. Compare <i>2 HIV </i ...

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