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1131 to 1140 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1131) Commentary Note for line 3733_373:
3733 Richer then that which foure successiue Kings
3734-5 In Denmarkes Crowne haue worne: | giue me the cups,
    ... arthly thunder.</para> <para>&#x201C;<i>Shakespear</i>  keeps up the characters  ...
1132) Commentary Note for line 3746_374:
3746 Ostrick. A hit, a very palpable hit. {Drum, trumpets and shot.}
3747 Laer. Well, againe. {Florish, a peece goes off.}
    ...  feature in the royal murderer. May not Shakespeare, who everywhere shows sucha  ...
    ... hamber</i>: &#x201C;As most students of Shakespeare know, on 29 June 1613, the G ...
1133) Commentary Note for line 3756_375:
3756 Quee. Hee's fat and scant of breath.
3757 {Heere Hamlet take my} <Heere's a> napkin rub thy browes,
3758 The Queene carowses to thy fortune Hamlet.
    ...  in the two former of these characters, Shakespeare might have put this observat ...
    ... acted<i> Hamlet</i>  during the life of Shakespeare. STEEVENS&#x201D;</para></cn ...
    ... t. 1989, 5:6:185): &#x201C;Do you think Shakespeare thought about such things as ...
    ... n, and occurs in many other passages of Shakespeare; [cites<i> AYL</i>, 4.3]'And ...
    ... t he was celebrated for his Hamlet, and Shakespeare's words are employed, with r ...
    ... ing-scene, is noticed the very words of Shakespeare:&#8212;'Not more young Hamle ...
    ...  want to point out in this section that Shakespeare lends a hand not to the appa ...
    ... er's death.' Dass Burbage den Hamlet in Shakespeare's Sinne und vielleicht nach  ...
    ... 's death.' That Burbage acted Hamlet in Shakespeare's time and perhaps according ...
    ... , and &#8216;The Lives of the Actors in Shakespeare's Plays' (printed by the Sha ...
    ... in Shakespeare's Plays' (printed by the Shakesp. Soc.  in 1846), pp. 21.52</smal ...
    ... e pinques[?]  and corpulent.</i> See my Shakesp.&#8212;Forsch. I. p. 46.&#x201D; ...
    ... er's Memoirs of the principal Actors in Shakespeare's plays, p. 52, we find: [ci ...
    ... ts in which Burbadge was distinguished. Shakespeare's words are there used in fe ...
    ... nd though &#8216;fey' does not occur in Shakespeare, it was probably picked up i ...
    ... was lately proposed by Plehwe, A German Shakespearian, who justly quotes in supp ...
    ... ective.1&#x201D; &lt;n&gt; &#x201C;1For Shakespeare's time and later cf. Sidney, ...
    ... &#x201C;It is ludicrous to suppose that Shakespeare is referring to the increasi ...
    ... f fat ((<i>JEGP</i>, xxiv, 315-19), and Shakespearean instances include <i>Hamle ...
1134) Commentary Note for line 3768_376:
3768 King. I doe not think't.
3769 Laer. And yet {it is} <'tis> almost {against} <'gainst> my conscience.
    ... e' as a trisyllable, as it always is in Shakespeare, it is difficult to read the ...
1135) Commentary Note for line 3772_377:
3772 I pray you passe with your best violence
3773 I am {sure} <affear'd> you make a wanton of me.
    ...  the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...
1136) Commentary Note for line 3776_377:
3776 Laer. Haue at you now.
3777 <In scuffling they change Rapiers.>
    ... n Friesen in the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellshaft, IV, 374-77. R.G ...
    ... d. The absence of any q2 or indubitably Shakespearean direction lets us infer wh ...
    ... <i>Punch</i>, 1875, p. 255; Sprague, <i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i>, pp. 179- ...
    ... d therefore presumably no indication in Shakespeare's MS, how he wanted the cris ...
    ...  off his guard, their normal purpose in Shakespeare is to serve as a warning to  ...
1137) Commentary Note for line 3786_378:
3786 Ham. How dooes the Queene?
3787 King. Shee sounds to see them bleed.
    ... ve all the modern <i> swoon</i> for the Shakespearean <i>to swoond</i> , also <i ...
    ...  sounds. Das Wort wurde n&#228;mlich zu Shakespeares Zeit 'swoonds' geschrieben. ...
    ... nds.' The word became written namely in Shakespeare's time 'swoonds.']</para></c ...
1138) Commentary Note for line 3791_379:
3791 Ham. O villanie, how let the doore be lock't, 3791
3792 Treachery, seeke it out.
    ... ds. delete. But if an editor is to help Shakespeare out, he should not remove a  ...
1139) Commentary Note for line 3805_380:
3805 All. Treason, treason.
3806 King. O yet defend me friends, I am but hurt.
3807-8 Ham. Heare thou incestious <murdrous,> | damned Dane,
    ... . HLA:<small>This is Carl Rohrbach's <i>Shakespeare's Hamlet</i> published in 18 ...
1140) Commentary Note for line 3806_380:
3806 King. O yet defend me friends, I am but hurt.
3807-8 Ham. Heare thou incestious <murdrous,>| damned Dane,
    ... ra>[Ed. HLA: This is Carl Rohrbach's <i>Shakespeare's Hamlet</i> published in 18 ...

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