1071 to 1080 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... this conduct of <sc>Hamlet</sc>, to the companions of his early days, does <sc>Shakespeare</sc> prove his skill in human nature; the strongest hatred succeedin ...
... p; submitting to any employment without enquiring whether it was right or wrong Shakespeare was aware that the Criticks would censure Hamlet for putting these m ...
... b> </tab><b>opposits</b>] <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1881): “Here, as usual in Shakespeare, <i>opposites </i>is <i>opponents</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sig ...
... Quair clxx, Though thy begynnyng hath bene retrograde Be froward opposyt. a1616 SHAKESPEARE Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) V. v. 27 Our foes..Being opposites of such re ...
... .) This must surely be the meaning of <i>thinke</i> in Gower, as quoted in Var. Shakespeare, vol. vi, p. 104—'For al such tyme of love is lore [i.e. <i>lo ...
... t follow the Quartos. I have consulted no other editions. Like the 1st folio of Shakespeare, the 1st edition (1651) of the Ordinary reads <i>thinkst</i> without ...
... inke thee</b>]<b> </b><sc>Dyce </sc>(ed. 1857, 252) : “Sidney Walker (<i>Shakespeare's Versification </i> , &c. p. 281) observes, that ‘<i>thin ...
... . 272>“<i>thinkst thee</i>]]For <i>thinkst</i>, see S.V. [Walker's <i>Shakespeare Versification</i>, I believe], Art. lvii. p. 281. Add to the exampl ...
... u' or ‘think'st thou,' of which expression there are several instances in Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1866<tab> </tab>dyce2</sc></sig ...
... not</i>, thinkst <i>thee</i>,' &c.—<i> </i></small>Sidney Walker (<i>Shakespeare's Versification </i> , &c. p. 281) observes, that ‘<i>thin ...
... 1869): “S. Walker (Shakespeare's Versification p. 281) shows that [in? ] Shakespeare's time ‘think'st thee' occurs in the sense of <small>mæn ...
... . . </p. liii> <p. liv)</para> <para>“I shall be told that had Shakespeare intended all this he would have made it plainer. The argument really ...
... his he would have made it plainer. The argument really cuts the other way. That Shakespeare did intend it is proved by Hamlet's two references to his loss of th ...
... scene. And the fact that these references occur so late in the play proves that Shakespeeare did not need to make it plainer, that he knew his audience would as ...
... e dangers of the ‘historical' method, that is of explaining situations in Shakespeare by reference to his hypothetical sources. I say ‘hypothetical' ...
... e elective character of the Danish monarchy in his lost <i>Hamlet</i>.1 But had Shakespeare intended himself to make use of this constitutional idea, we can be ...
... er the accession of the Scottish King James and his Danish consort, Queen Anne, Shakespeare's audience came to include a few ‘judicious' countiers more kn ...
... the principle of primogeniture. However it be looked at, an elective throne in Shakespeare's Denmark is a critical mare's nest.∗</para> <para><n>&l ...
... <i>Hamlet</i> play was handled by a dramatist who knew more about Denmark than Shakespeare appears to have done; cf. Notes, <i>Names of the Characters</i> and ...
... rding to meere Right, and Law, but also after Equitie and good Conscience. 1604 SHAKES. Oth. III. iii. 203 Their best Conscience, Is not to leaue 't vndone, but ...
... rs. Malone and Knight.</para> <para>“I have no doubt that Rowe gave what Shakespeare wrote. Steevens's defence of ‘count' (in reply to M. Mason) is ...
... eads ‘To <i> quit him with </i> his own?' see Mr. Collier's one-volume <i>Shakespeare</i> .”</para> <para>3582<tab> </tab><b>count his fauours</b>] ...
... rs. Malone and Knight.</para> <para>“I have no doubt that Rowe gave what Shakespeare wrote. Steevens's defence of ‘count' (in reply to M. Mason) is ...
... eads ‘To <i> quit him with </i> his own?' see Mr. Collier's one-volume <i>Shakespeare</i> .”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1857 <tab> </tab>elze1</sc ...
1079) Commentary Note for line 3581_358: 3581 <For by the image of my Cause, I see> 3582 <The Portraiture of his; Ile count his fauours:>
3583 <But sure the brauery of his griefe did put me>
3584 <Into a Towring passion.>
3585 <Hor. Peace, who comes heere?> 3585
... rs. Malone and Knight.</para> <para>“I have no doubt that Rowe gave what Shakespeare wrote. Steevens's defence of ‘count' (in reply to M. Mason) is ...
... I:30): <p. 30> “Ostrick is a whimsical mushroom of fancy, and tho' Shakespeare presents his audience with a danish beau, he took the constituent pa ...
... ffectedness of gesticulation; Mr. <i>Garrick</i> has rejected him indeed, as <i>Shakespeare</i> says he speaks an infinite deal of nothing.”</para></cn> ...
... “The next scene is one of the most charming pieces of high comedy which Shakespeare has left us; and those are very superficial critics who talk of the ...
... in the edition of 1603 [Q1], was perhaps not in the old play, but one found by Shakespeare in his favourite Holinshed.” </p. 31></para></cn> <cn> ...
... the most valuable assistance in determining what was the original intention of Shakespeare. The <i>Gentleman</i> who in that edition of the play takes the plac ...
... he same, with the exception of one or two words, as in the ordinary editions of Shakespeare; but it differs from that of the first filio, for the latter omits a ...
... haracter with the court drones who hummed and buzzed round their queen in 1585. Shakespeare marks this feature when he makes Hamlet say of Osric: ‘Dost th ...
... es to birds in this episode, it is tempting to suppose that ‘Ostrick' was Shakespeare's original intention. But at lines [3838], and F has ‘<i>Osric ...