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241 to 250 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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241) Commentary Note for line 583:
583 {Lends} <Giues> the tongue vowes, these blazes daughter
    ... hese blazes, daughter, mark you.' or D. Shakespeare never introduces a catalecti ...
    ...  that in this or the foregoing speeches Shakespear meant to bring out the senili ...
    ...  you&#8212;'</para> <para>&#x201C;N. B. Shakespear never introduces  a catalecti ...
    ... that in this or the foregoing Speeches, Shakespear meant to bring out the senili ...
    ... yce</sc> (ed. 1866): &#x201C;Walker (<i>Shakespeare's Versification</i>, &amp;c. ...
    ... hort-lived bursts of flame (as often in Shakespeare).  Compare [<i>R2</i> 2.1.33 ...
242) Commentary Note for line 586:
586 You must not take for fire, {from} <For> this time <Daughter,>
    ...  a kind of absorption not infrequent in Shakespeare. The F. verse, moreover, see ...
243) Commentary Note for line 588:
588 Set your {intreatments} <entreatments> at a higher rate
    ... <i>Hamlet</i> made to her. I suspect <i>Shakespear</i> wrote, &#8216;<i>Set your ...
    ... : &#x201C;<small>Not elsewhere found in Shakespeare. </small>Johnson interprets  ...
    ... and had become conventional long before Shakespeare's time. It survives in the p ...
    ... ntreaments</i>, a rare word not used by Shakespeare elsewhere."</para></cn>  <cn ...
    ... reaties' = solicitations. The word is a Shakespearean coinage: see [275 CN] &#x2 ...
244) Commentary Note for line 593:
593 Doe not belieue his vowes, for they are brokers
    ... urd a Thought could scarse come from <i>Shakespeare</i>. The only tolerable Way  ...
    ... this Emendation when I publish'd my <sc>Shakespeare </sc><i>restor'd</i>. and Mr ...
    ... o <i>bauds</i>, and the very title that Shakespeare gives to Pandarus in his [<i ...
    ... >.  This secondary sense is dominant in Shakespeare, and is the relevant one her ...
245) Commentary Note for line 594:
594 Not of {that die} <the eye> which their inuestments showe
    ... small> as in the only other place where Shakespeare uses it</small>&#8212;[<i>2H ...
    ... The only other instance of this word in Shakespeare (<i>2H4</i> 4.1.45) also ref ...
    ... ments.  On the only other occasion when Shakespeare employs this word, [<i>2H4</ ...
    ... stments</i> in this sense seems to be a Shakespearean coinage, first occurring i ...
246) Commentary Note for line 595:
595 But meere {imploratotors} <implorators> of vnholy suites
    ... an cite no other example, seems to be a Shakespearian coinage."</para>  <br/><ha ...
    ... ard to be dogmatic in emending a unique Shakespearean coinage and that the resul ...
247) Commentary Note for line 596:
596 Breathing like sanctified and pious bonds
    ... s<i>,' &amp;c.&#8212;</i>Mr. Singer (<i>Shakespeare Vindicated</i>, &amp;c. p. 2 ...
    ... commentators; but see how it is used in Shakespeare in other passages we have he ...
    ... ewhere). 'Bonds of love' are common and Shakespearean (cf. <i>Son.</i> 142) and  ...
    ... be accounted for on the assumption that Shakespeare wrote <i>bauds</i>, a spelli ...
248) Commentary Note for line 599:
599 Haue you so slaunder any moment leasure {D1}
    ... essary to print &#8216;moment's.' Would Shakespeare have employed such a ridicul ...
    ... ous:&#8212; [quotes]. It is doubtful if Shakespeare would have <i>squander </i>h ...
    ... ct a great cause of the difficulties in Shakespeare. Indeed, we think it might b ...
    ...  Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds/ of Shakespeare</i>, p. 209, I perhaps too h ...
249) Commentary Note for line 601:
601 Looke too't I charge you, come your wayes.
    ... n your way'.  See Franz, <i>Die Sprache Shakespeare</i>, p. 219."</para></cn> <c ...
250) Commentary Note for line 604:
604 Ham. The ayre bites {shroudly, it is very colde.} <shrewdly: is it very cold?>
    ... > </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rp ...
    ... Coleridge </sc>instanced, as a proof of Shakespear's minute knowledge of human n ...
    ...  demonstrates the exquisite judgment of Shakespear.  By thus entangling the atte ...
    ... No modern writer would have dared, Like Shakespear, to have preceded this last v ...
    ... th which this scene opens is a proof of Shakespeare's minute knowledge of nature ...
    ... h which this scene opens, is a proof of Shakespeare's minute knowledge of human  ...
    ... cal sentences of this speech of Hamlet, Shakespeare takes them completely by sur ...
    ... no modern writer would have dared, like Shakespeare, to have preceded this last  ...
    ... rely unworthy of consideration, because Shakespeare's purpose in these two speec ...
    ... with which this scene opens is proof of Shakespeare's minute knowledge of human  ...

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