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1141 to 1150 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1141) Commentary Note for line 3809:
3809 Drinke {of} <off> this potion, is {the Onixe} <thy Vnion> heere?
    ... c> (ed. 1773) : &#x201C;it's likely <i> Shakespeare</i>  first wrote <i>onys</i> ...
1142) Commentary Note for line 3814_381:
3814 Mine and my fathers death come not vppon thee,
3815 Nor thine on me. <Dyes.> 3815
    ... le with <i>my</i>, and is often used by Shakespare where we should use <i>my</i> ...
1143) Commentary Note for line 3819:
3819 That are but mutes, or audience to this act,
    ... mance, is discussed by Anne Righter, <i>Shakespeare and the Idea of the Play</i> ...
1144) Commentary Note for line 3820_382:
3820 Had I but time, as this fell sergeant Death 3820
3821 Is strict in his arrest, ô I could tell you,
3822 But let it be; Horatio I am dead,
    ... ented by performers upon the stage. <sc>Shakespeare</sc> himself seems to have a ...
    ... k. Sylvester is the earlier writer, but Shakespeare's substitution of &#8216;fel ...
    ... b>] <sc>Edelman</sc> (2000): &#x201C;In Shakespeare, normally a civilian officer ...
    ...  he durst not haue done as he dyd. 1602 SHAKES. Ham. V. ii. 347 Had I but time,  ...
1145) Commentary Note for line 3825_382:
3825 Hora. Neuer belieue it;
3826 I am more an anticke Romaine then a Dane,
3827 Heere's yet some liquer left.
    ... like the old Romans, from whose history Shakespeare knew such examples of suicid ...
    ... ives both dates] for one Franz Horn, <i>Shakespeare's Shauspiele Erl&#228;utert] ...
    ... oratio wishes to depart in what a later Shakespearean character calls 'the high  ...
1146) Commentary Note for line 3830:
3830 O {god} <good> Horatio, what a wounded name {O1v}
    ... #8216;god' is a fairly well-established Shakespearian spelling of &#8216;good',  ...
1147) Commentary Note for line 3831_383:
3831 Things standing thus vnknowne, shall {I leaue} <liue> behind me?
3832 If thou did'st euer hold me in thy hart,
3833 Absent thee from felicity a while,
    ... we have seen1, of that misprint is that Shakespeare employed the not uncommon sp ...
1148) Commentary Note for line 3838_384:
3838 Enter Osrick.
3839 Osr. Young Fortenbrasse with conquest come from Poland,
3840 To th'embassadors of England giues this warlike volly. 3840
    ... ear that he has left the stage. Perhaps Shakespeare meant him to go to the door  ...
    ... o. It is conceivable that at this point Shakespeare simply decided to change the ...
    ... lery pieces (<i>OED sb </i>1). [ . . .] Shakespeare's other volley [other than < ...
1149) Commentary Note for line 3841_384:
3841 Ham. O I die Horatio,
3842 The potent poyson quite ore-crowes my spirit,
3843 I cannot liue to heare the newes from England,
    ... &#x201C;[ore-crowes] may perhaps be <i> Shakespeare's </i> word; we have then th ...
    ...   in further sense, as here, so also in Shakespeare's contemporaries as not to a ...
    ... 931 Bradby, G[eoffrey]  F[ox]. <i>About Shakespeare ad his Plays.</i> London: Ox ...
1150) Commentary Note for line 3846_384:
3846 So tell him, with th'occurrants more and lesse
3847 Which haue solicited, the rest is silence. < O, o, o, o. Dyes>
    ... of this primary one. In the langauge of Shakespeare, Edward <i>solicited, </i>or ...
    ... ra></cn>  <cn> <sigla>1989<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare on Film Newsletter</i> </sig ...
    ... he suggestion of E.A.J. Honigmann in <i>Shakespeare Survey</i> 29 (1976), 123.&# ...

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