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271 to 280 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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271) Commentary Note for line 621+21:
621+21 {Doth all the noble substance of a doubt}
    ... x201C;It seems to me most probable that Shakespeare wrote:&#8212; &#8216;Doth al ...
    ...  it works in, like the dyer's hand.' <i>Shakespeare's Sonnets </i>[<i>Son. </i>1 ...
    ... f the old editions that, if it was what Shakespeare wrote, we can hardly conceiv ...
    ... xt line. <i>Endow </i>was often used in Shakespeare's time for <i>endue</i>, whi ...
    ... to the censure of a doubt. This is like Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para> <para><b>Ed. ...
    ... ts his conjecture from his 1922 book <i>Shakespeare-W&#246;rterbuch</i>: <i>oft  ...
    ... its Hilda M.  Hulme, <i>Explorations in Shakespeare's Language</i>, 1962, with t ...
272) Commentary Note for line 622:
622 Enter Ghost.
    ... 3-2519], continues &#x201C;as indeed <i>Shakespear</i> is in the fomer Scene, wh ...
273) Commentary Note for line 624:
624 Ham. Angels and Ministers of grace defend vs:
    ... s-guided Actor was all the while (as <i>Shakespeare </i>terms it) tearing a Pass ...
    ... r in any Age <i>penned</i> a Ghost like Shakespeare, so in our Time no Actor eve ...
    ... ulting in the great genius. Garrick and Shakespeare have acknowledged each other ...
    ... through a third party, through mankind. Shakespeare would have it thus, and this ...
    ... e rather than of apprehension. No doubt Shakespeare had often heard among his to ...
    ... riate guardians of the faithful. . . .' Shakespeare drops the phrase 'of salvati ...
    ... ve spirits as identical ('angels are'), Shakespeare differentiates them ('angels ...
    ... race, which seems to be Calvin's sense. Shakespeare has Hamlet use the name in a ...
    ... . This is standard Protestant doctrine. Shakespeare borrows the term in question ...
274) Commentary Note for line 625:
625 Be thou a spirit of health, or goblin damn'd,
    ... ich some critics think is imitated from Shakespeare's Hamlet, i.4&#8212;[he quot ...
275) Commentary Note for line 627:
627 Be thy {intents} <euents> wicked, or charitable,
    ... ents</i>; from whence I suspect that <i>Shakespear</i> wrote, &#8216;<i>Be thy < ...
    ... &#8216;<i>events</i>.' Why, I know not. Shakespeare was wont to use words in the ...
276) Commentary Note for line 628:
628 Thou com'st in such a questionable shape,
    ... tionable</i> 1a), not used elsewhere in Shakespeare.&#x201D; </para></cn>  <cn>  ...
    ... ara> </cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British  ...
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
    ... 1.1.124 [124+4]; Holderness, Graham. <i>Shakespeare: The Histories. </i> London: ...
277) Commentary Note for line 631:
631 Let me not burst in ignorance, but tell
    ...  seems more reasonable to conclude that Shakespeare could use the same expressiv ...
278) Commentary Note for line 632:
632 Why thy canoniz'd bones hearsed in death
    ... for; and instances are very numerous in Shakespeare. The poet is to take his sha ...
    ... should have been placed here: And so <i>Shakespear </i>placed it, as we shall se ...
    ...  not possible to give it some sense? <i>Shakespear</i> is bold in his use of wor ...
    ... this passage. He would persuade us that Shakespear wrote, <i>hearsed in earth</i ...
    ...  the second,</small> is not peculiar to Shakespeare, but the practuce of several ...
    ... e principal accent coming first. But in Shakespeare's time it would seem that th ...
    ... lf. This seems to be the usual sense in Shakespeare (e.g. <i>R3</i> 1.2.2; <i>MV ...
    ... e</i> is invariably &#8216;a coffin' in Shakespeare."</para></cn> <cn><sigla>198 ...
279) Commentary Note for line 633:
632 633 Haue burst their {cerements?} <cerments,> why the Sepulcher,
    ... is usually, but not always, accented by Shakespeare on the first syllable.&#x201 ...
    ... t Steevens and Malone suggest that here Shakespeare licentiously cast aside its  ...
    ... newly adopted into English (possibly by Shakespeare himself). This can be seen f ...
    ...  <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C;A Shakespearean coinage for 'burial clothe ...
    ... 216;waxed wrappings for the dead', is a Shakespearian invention, derived from th ...
    ...  (pronounced 'seerments'); apparently a Shakespearean coinage from the more fami ...
280) Commentary Note for line 634:
634 Wherein we saw thee quietly {interr'd} <enurn'd,>
    ... , which also appears in Q1.  No one but Shakespeare could have created so strong ...
    ... rned'.  'urn' was often used loosely by Shakespere and others to mean a grave, b ...
    ... nerary urn.  It has been suggested that Shakespeare wrote 'enurned' during revis ...
    ... 987): "buried, entombed &#8211; another Shakespearian coinage.  The use of <i>ur ...
    ... </i> 5.6.144 (3825)] is not peculiar to Shakespeare.  Dekker writes, &#8216;The  ...

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