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1051 to 1060 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1051) Commentary Note for line 3517_351:
3517 My feares forgetting manners to {vnfold} <vnseale> {N1v}
3518 Their graund commission; where I found Horatio

    ... eing probably caught from the line above [<i>making so bold</i>]<i> </i>. Here Shakespeare would have avoided a rhyme; and from <i> Hamlet's </i> fourth speec ...

    ... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...

    ... the Ff.; Qq by evident attraction from <i>sold</i> above, print <i>unfold</i>. Shakespeare would of course have avoided a rhyme in the middle of a passage of b ...

    ... one, I think, can reasonably doubt that the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inferior redaings here come from the better ...
1052) Commentary Note for line 3519:
3519 {A} <Oh> royall knauery, an exact command

    ... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
1053) Commentary Note for line 3520_352:
3520 Larded with many seuerall sorts of {reasons,} <reason;> 3520
3521 Importing Denmarkes health, and Englands to,

    ... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
1054) Commentary Note for line 3522:
3522 With hoe such bugges and goblines in my life,

    ... your threats; The <i>bug</i> which you would fright me with, I seek. &#8216; <i>Shakespeare</i>.</para> <para>&#x201C;&#8216;Hast not slept to night? would he n ...

    ... your threats; The <i>bug</i> which you would fright me with, I seek. &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare</i>.</para> <para>&#x201C;Hast not slept to night? would he not, nau ...

    ... s the root of <i>Bacchus</i>. Nearly two thousand years later it was adopted by Shakespeare; perhaps as the name of a goblin of the Avon and the Forest of Arden ...
1055) Commentary Note for line 3527_352:
3527 Ham. Heeres the commission, read it at more leasure,
3528 But wilt thou heare {now} <me> how I did proceed.

    ... hich an actor would be likely to stumble. Thus, though I make little doubt that Shakespeare was himself responsible for it, there is something to be said on aes ...
1056) Commentary Note for line 3529_353:
3529 Hora. I beseech you.
3530 Ham. Being thus benetted round with villaines, 3530

    ... &#x201D; is us'd for &#8212;<i> ere,</i> or, <i> or ere</i> , as was common in Shakespeare's time. [TLN? &#8776; The changes in the opposite page, are in the f ...

    ... F and Q2 agree in reading &#8216;villains' and that is presumably what stood in Shakespeare's MS. But this leaves the line metrically lame, and the abstract is ...

    ... e than the concrete that it is usually assumed that &#8216;villainies' was what Shakespeare meant to write.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1987<tab> </tab><sc> ...
1057) Commentary Note for line 3531:
3531 {Or} <Ere> I could make a prologue to my braines,

    ... Text and Pointing. <i>Making a Prologue to his Brains</i> is such a Phrase as SHAKESPEARE would never have us'd, to mean, <i>e're I could form my Thoughts to ...

    ... q have <i> Or</i> , what is equivalent to <i> before</i> , already obsolete in Shakespeare's time and only retained in combination with <i> e'er</i>. In the F ...

    ... eacherous uncle, we cannot but believe that it also gives us a vivid picture of Shakespeare's own mode of sitting down to write&#8212;his teeming brains beginni ...

    ... q have <i> Or</i> , what is equivalent to <i> before</i> , already obsolete in Shakespeare's time and only retained in combination with <i> e'er</i>. In the F ...

    ... ns, all the rest follow Johnson. <sc>Clarke </sc>sees herein a vivid picture of shakespeare's own mode of composition, his teeming brains beginning aplay, and s ...

    ... ;argument' or summary of the action to follow, it is tempting to speculate that Shakespeare is referring here to his own manner of working, which may well have ...
1058) Commentary Note for line 3533:
3533 Deuisd a new commission, wrote it faire,

    ... D; &lt;/p. 229&gt;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>mHUNTER (<i>Prolegomena and Notes on Shakespeare</i> [BL ADD. MS. 24495 ]</sigla> </cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1882<tab> ...
1059) Commentary Note for line 3534_353:
3534 I once did hold it as our statists doe,
3535 A basenesse to write faire, and labourd much 3535

    ... atesmen to scorn a beautiful hand as beneath their dignity, occurred usually in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1856<tab> </tab><sc>hud1 (1 ...

    ... s a statesman.' Steevens.&#8212;Die Namensz&#252;ge und Unterschriften waren zu Shakespeare's Zeiten noch bei Weitem unleserlicher, als heut zu Tage. Ist doch s ...

    ... g has always been considered a mark of distinction. It obviously is so now; and Shakespeare, and not Shakespeare alone, is witness that it was formerly.</small> ...

    ... sidered a mark of distinction. It obviously is so now; and Shakespeare, and not Shakespeare alone, is witness that it was formerly.</small> Ritson quotes from F ...
1060) Commentary Note for line 3536_353:
3536 How to forget that learning, but sir now
3537 It did me {yemans} <Yeomans> seruice, wilt thou know

    ... writing a good hand was the particular qualification of a yeoman in the time of Shakespear. To do one knight's or eyoman's service is an expression by no means ...

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