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71 to 80 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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71) Commentary Note for line 124+17:
124+17 {Haue heauen and earth together demonstrated}
    ... ed. 1872): &#x201C;This word is used by Shakespeare with the accent sometimes on ...
72) Commentary Note for line 125:
125 Enter Ghost <againe>.
    ... aving a Ghost appear twice is something Shakespeare repeats effectively with Ban ...
73) Commentary Note for lines 127-8:
127 Ile crosse it though it blast mee: stay illusion, {It spreads}
128 If thou hast any sound or vse of voyce, {his armes.}
    ... ant piece of stage-business intended by Shakespeare, and editors who ignore it m ...
74) Commentary Note for line 132:
132 Which happily foreknowing may auoyd
132 O speake:
    ... ..e.</i> by hap, chance, is frequent in Shakespeare. Some editors take the word  ...
75) Commentary Note for lines 135-6:
135 For which they say {your} <you> spirits oft walke in death. {The cocke}
136 Speake of it, stay and speake, stop it Marcellus. {crowes.}
    ... #8216;a most inimitable circumstance in Shakespeare' the aggravation of suspense ...
76) Commentary Note for line 137:
137 Mar. Shall I strike <at> it with my partizan?
    ... in the sixteenth century, though not in Shakespeare.)&#x201D;</para></cn>  <cn>  ...
    ... partisan is used only for guard duty in Shakespeare, most notably by Marcellus,  ...
77) Commentary Note for line 142:
142 We doe it wrong<,> being so Maiesticall
    ... ed Denmark'. Woudhuysen points out that Shakespeare uses the more archaic form   ...
78) Commentary Note for line 143:
143 To offer it the showe of violence,
    ...  distribution of these two spellings in Shakespeare's day or on the distribution ...
79) Commentary Note for line 144:
144 For it is as the ayre, invulnerable,
    ... rds were associated with one another in Shakespeare's mind.&#x201D;</para></cn>  ...
80) Commentary Note for line 149:
149 The Cock that is the trumpet to the {morne} <day>,
    ... reek]. Mr. Douce not only supposes that Shakespeare had seen these lines, but is ...
    ... . 1913):   &#x201C;this word is used by Shakespeare in the sense of &#8216;trump ...

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