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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... rated</b>] <sc>Clark & Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “This word is used by Shakespeare with the accent sometimes on the first and <small>sometimes on the s ...
... #x201C;The doubly disturbing effect of having a Ghost appear twice is something Shakespeare repeats effectively with Banquo in <i>Mac</i> 3.4.”</para></c ...
73) Commentary Note for lines 127-8:128 If thou hast any sound or vse of voyce, {his armes.}... direction undoubtedly embodies an important piece of stage-business intended by Shakespeare, and editors who ignore it merely abdicate their functions.” ...
... c>Deighton</sc> (ed. 1891): “<i>i..e.</i> by hap, chance, is frequent in Shakespeare. Some editors take the word in its more ordinary sense, explaining w ...
75) Commentary Note for lines 135-6:136 Speake of it, stay and speake, stop it Marcellus. {crowes.}... iour here, see [409]. Warton noted as ‘a most inimitable circumstance in Shakespeare' the aggravation of suspense when the Ghost, hitherto silent, at len ...
... adherent' or 'party member' also occurs in the sixteenth century, though not in Shakespeare.)”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>2000<tab> </tab>Edelman</sigla><h ...
... ing flukes at its base (E & P), The partisan is used only for guard duty in Shakespeare, most notably by Marcellus, who offers to ‘strike at” t ...
... is so much that of 'the majesty of buried Denmark'. Woudhuysen points out that Shakespeare uses the more archaic form <i>majestical</i> in his plays up to and ...
78) Commentary Note for line 143:143 To offer it the showe of violence,... th century; but it sheds no light on the distribution of these two spellings in Shakespeare's day or on the distribution of the longer forms with a final 'e.'&# ...
79) Commentary Note for line 144:144 For it is as the ayre, invulnerable,... g example of the way in which certain words were associated with one another in Shakespeare's mind.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1996<tab> </tab>Kliman</sigl ...
... hymn in the Salisbury service [quotes Greek]. Mr. Douce not only supposes that Shakespeare had seen these lines, but is disposed to infer from some parts of th ...
... /tab><b>trumpet</b>] <sc>Goggin</sc> (ed. 1913): “this word is used by Shakespeare in the sense of ‘trumpeter,' e.g. [<i>H5 </i> 4.2.61 (2205)]; ...
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