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1031 to 1040 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1031) Commentary Note for line 3474:
3474 Ile doo't, doost <thou> come heere to whine?
    ... inmal.&#x201D; [The artful pause, which Shakespeare allows to enter after <i>I'l ...
1032) Commentary Note for line 3482:
3482 {Quee.} <Kin.> This is meere madnesse,
    ... character it is better  suited.  But if Shakespeare designed it for the King, he ...
    ... these lines. See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare=Gesellschaft, XVI, 239.&#x20 ...
1033) Commentary Note for line 3485_348:
3485 When that her golden {cuplets} <Cuplet> are {disclosed} <disclos'd> 3485
3486 His silence will sit drooping.
    ... ks to remedy this by comparing works of Shakespeare and Milton to the Romantic m ...
    ...  according to the usual commenting upon Shakespeare.  To disclose simply means t ...
    ... 01C;The reliable natural observation in Shakespeare is similar to a brilliant pa ...
    ... : &#x201C;This is a curious instance of Shakespeare's accuracy in those illustra ...
    ... nother way of accounting for this fact. Shakespeare knew that the deeper griefs  ...
1034) Commentary Note for line 3490_349:
3490 Let Hercules himselfe doe what he may
3491 The Cat will mew, and Dogge will haue his day. Exit {Hamlet}
    ... B. Street on two well-known passages in Shakespeare.  With regard to the first,  ...
    ... ss </i>bit of slang.' <sc>Elze</sc> (<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, Bd. xi) adds a ...
    ... e my note in the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XI, 297 seq. T ...
1035) Commentary Note for line 3495_349:
3495 Good Gertrard set some watch ouer your sonne, 3495
3496 This graue shall haue a liuing monument,
    ... ything is most ingeniously contrived by Shakespeare to fan the flame of his rese ...
1036) Commentary Note for line 3497:
3497 An houre of quiet {thereby} <shortly> shall we see
    ... and it is obvious that, whether because Shakespeare happened here to form his &# ...
    ... made sense, though not at all the sense Shakespeare had intended. The example is ...
1037) Commentary Note for line 3499:
3499 Enter Hamlet and Horatio.
    ... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
1038) Commentary Note for line 3500:
3500 Ham. So much for this sir, now {shall you} <let me> see the other, 3500
    ... that the first fifty-five lines are not Shakespeare's.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn>  ...
    ... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
    ... ;some rights of memory in the kingdom'. Shakespeare, as is his custom, gives us  ...
1039) Commentary Note for line 3501:
3501 You doe remember all the circumstance.
    ... ourt.  I persist in observing that from Shakespeare's drama no proofs of the gui ...
    ... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...
1040) Commentary Note for line 3502:
3502 Hora. Remember it my Lord.
    ... ourt.  I persist in observing that from Shakespeare's drama no proofs of the gui ...
    ... #x201C;It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write dow ...

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