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31) Commentary Note for line 76:
76 Such was the very Armor he had on,
    ... i>The Pre-Shakespeaian Ghost </i>and <i>Shakespeare's Ghosts</i>, M.L.R. vol. 1. ...
    ...  sentinels; all the other characters in Shakespeare's plays who are associated w ...
32) Commentary Note for line 78:
78 So frownd he once, when in an angry parle
    ... ,' or, as it would have been written in Shakespeare's time, &#8216;sturdie.' F.  ...
    ...  444): &#x201C;I have consulted a dozen Shakespeares and can find no emendation  ...
    ... as this emendation struck any editor of Shakespeare? Has the passage come before ...
    ... and <i>parley</i> are elsewhere used by Shakespeare only of a friendly conferenc ...
    ... arallel for such a use of <i>parle, </i>Shakespeare more than once uses the verb ...
    ...  verse he wrote for the 1640 edition of Shakespeare's poems. He tells of how the ...
33) Commentary Note for line 79:
79 He smot the {sleaded pollax} <sledded Pollax> on the ice.
    ... i>Poll-axe: </i>Many pretend to know <i>Shakespear</i>'s Meaning better than him ...
    ... the corrupted word shews, I think, that Shakespeare wrote &#8212;<i>Polacks.</i> ...
    ... as the name by which they were known in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para> </cn> ...
    ... i>, or as it would have been written in Shakespare's time&#8212;<i>sleaded. stur ...
    ... x201D;</para> <para>&#x201C;Assume that Shakespear made Hamlet talk like a Dane  ...
    ... erm of abuse or dislike. It was rife in Shakespears time: and I believe it may b ...
    ... ening we drink.' Of course, if I were a Shakespearian commentator I should sugge ...
    ... eading&#8212;not because I thought that Shakespear wrote it (for the preliminary ...
    ... however, as twice elsewhere in the play Shakespeare employs &#8216;Polack,' in t ...
    ... s with the Norwegians (see Schmidt's <i>Shakespeare-Lexicon: Sledded</i>) than w ...
    ... the corrupted word shows, I think, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks.</i>' </par ...
    ... Why does the corrupted words show, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks? </i>Why do ...
    ... i>, or as it would have been written in Shakespeare's time&#8212;<i>sleaded. stu ...
    ... s there be added to them a passage from Shakespeare or from one of his contempor ...
    ... that it &#x201C;gives the sense of what Shakespeare intended, i.e. that the dead ...
    ...  </i>There is, however, one instance in Shakespeare's [<i>Luc. </i>176], which r ...
    ... In <i>Hamlet, </i>II. ii [1088, 1100],  Shakespeare twice uses &#8216;Polack' in ...
    ... salynde.</i></para> <para>&#x201C;Might Shakespeare have written &#8216;studded  ...
    ... dt; studded? &#8212;D. Haley in the <i> Shakespeare Quarterly</i> 29 [1978], pp. ...
    ... 8-9). The 'Greekish lad' is Pyrrhus and Shakespeare drew on this scene for the P ...
34) Commentary Note for line 81:
81 Mar. Thus twice before, and {iump} <iust> at this dead houre,
    ... sc>(1747-): &#x201C;yet the old one was Shakespear's.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn>  ...
    ... just</i> were synonymous in the time of Shakespeare. Ben Jonson speaks of verses ...
    ... e more modern word, <i>just:</i> but in Shakespeare's day, &#8216;jump' <small>w ...
35) Commentary Note for line 83:
83 Hora. In what perticular {thought, to worke} <thought to work,> I know not,
    ... o be shaken; so is its ominousness' (<i>Shakespeare's Early Tragedies</i> (Londo ...
    ... ould have been of greater importance to Shakespeare's audience than it may be to ...
36) Commentary Note for line 85:
85 This bodes some strange eruption to our state.
    ... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British  ...
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
37) Commentary Note for line 88:
88 So nightly toiles the subiect of the land,
    ... e only use as intransitive were used in Shakespeare's time also as transitive, e ...
38) Commentary Note for line 90:
90 And forraine marte, for implements of warre,
    ... unds an issue of enormous importance in Shakespearean times: England's participa ...
39) Commentary Note for line 91:
91 Why such impresse of ship-writes, whose sore taske
    ... tutes,</i> p. 300, having observed that Shakespeare gives English manners to eve ...
    ... x201C;Such confidence has there been in Shakespeare's accuracy, that this passag ...
    ... in the only two other passages in which Shakespeare uses the word <i>impress, </ ...
40) Commentary Note for line 96:
96 Hora. That can I.
    ... 7, Jenkins says: &#x201C;The play shows Shakespeare in two minds about [Hor.].&# ...
    ... viii; G. F. Bradby, <i>Short Studies in Shakespeare, </i>pp. 145 ff. Jenkins als ...

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