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11) Commentary Note for lines 24-25:
24-5 Fran. Barnardo {hath} <ha's> my place; giue you good night. | Exit Fran.

    ... at &#x201C;the scribes and compositors had as much to do with these variants as Shakespeare, whose preference we may suspect would be for the -<i>th</i> form.&# ...
12) Commentary Note for line 27:
27 Bar. Say, what is Horatio there?

    ... see <i>OED </i>What <sc>a </sc>21). </para> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...

    ... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>27-8 <tab> ...
13) Commentary Note for line 28:
28 Hora. A peece of him.

    ... ne he cites for an earlier crux]<small> had the faintest notion of illustrating Shakespeare. when these things were uttered. If either of them had, some of the ...
14) Commentary Note for line 30:
30 {Hora.} <Mar.> What, ha's this thing appeard againe to night?

    ... hat part in the manuscript on which F. is based. But [Q2], no doubt, represents Shakespeare's original intention [. . . ].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1947< ...

    ... sted to those that feel and to those who do not feel the exquisite judgement of Shakespeare&#x201D; from <i>SC </i>1:20, 21) &lt;/p. 245&gt; &lt;p. 246&gt; she ...

    ... ong it is taking.' &lt;/p. 121&gt; &lt;p. 127&gt;Yet for Derrida, the figure of Shakespeare as a night-watchman on the ramparts of a tired 'Old Europe' whose 't ...
15) Commentary Note for line 31:
31 Bar. I haue seene nothing.

    ... (1995, p. 138) continues: &#x201C;In English, the prime mover of this shift is Shakespeare, who may be said to have given &#8216;to airy nothing/ A local habit ...
16) Commentary Note for line 32:
32 Mar. Horatio saies tis but our fantasie,

    ... #x201C;imagination. Both &#8216;fantasy' and &#8216;fancy' are commonly used by Shakespeare in this sense. The former is however found in the modern sense of &# ...

    ... ft</i> (with appendix on &#8216;Devils and Spirits'), 1584. On the dramatic use Shakespeare makes of conflicting contemporary attitudes to ghosts, see Dover Wil ...
17) Commentary Note for line 34:
34 Touching this dreaded sight twice seene of vs,

    ... para>34<tab> </tab><b>sight</b>] <sc>Warburton</sc> (ed. 1747): &#x201C;Perhaps Shakespear wrote SPRIGHT.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1747-<tab> </tab>m<sc ...

    ... here is therefore no ground for Mr. Warburton's conjecture, that &#8216;perhaps Shakespeare wrote, <i>spright</i>.' &#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> < ...
18) Commentary Note for line 36:
36 With vs to watch the minuts of this night,

    ... eevens</sc> (ed. 1773): &#x201C;This seems to have been an expression common in Shakespeare's time. I find [it] in one of Ford's plays, <i>The Fancies</i>, Act ...
19) Commentary Note for line 41:
41 And let vs once againe assaile your eares,

    ... d] </hanging><para>41-3<tab> </tab><sc>Deighton</sc> (ed. 1891): &#x201C; . . . Shakespeare treats the clause <b>What</b> . . . <b>seen</b> as though it has bee ...
20) Commentary Note for line 46:
46 Bar. Last night of all,

    ... rom first to last, is grand and majestick, and maintains an equal Character. <i>Shakespeare </i>has strictly observed that Rule of <i>Horace</i>, Nec Deus inter ...

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