<< Prev     1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 [16] 17 18 19 20 ..75     Next >>

151 to 160 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context
151) Commentary Note for line 575:
575 {Wrong} <Roaming> it thus{)}<,> you'l tender me a foole.

    ... ease, and cometh of running or riding over much . . . and will not be mended.' Shakespeare refers to a horse as a &#8216;poor jade' twice: at [<i>1H4 </i> 2.1 ...
152) Commentary Note for line 581:
581 Pol. I, {springs} <Springes> to catch wood-cockes, I doe knowe

    ... do not believe that in this or any other of the foregoing speeches of Polonius, Shakespeare meant to bring out the senility or weakness of that personage's mind ...

    ... easy to catch (Tilley has 'A springe to catch a woodcock', S788): characters in Shakespeare use the word derogatively of other people they are tricking at <i>TN ...
153) Commentary Note for line 583:
583 {Lends} <Giues> the tongue vowes, these blazes daughter

    ... or &#8216;Lends the tongue vows.&#8212;These blazes, daughter, mark you.' or D. Shakespeare never introduces a catalectic line without intending an equivalent i ...
154) Commentary Note for line 588:
588 Set your {intreatments} <entreatments> at a higher rate

    ... hat there are military overtones to <i>entreaments</i>, a rare word not used by Shakespeare elsewhere."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></tab><sc>bev2</sc> </ ...
155) Commentary Note for line 593:
593 Doe not belieue his vowes, for they are brokers

    ... ll> </para> <para><small>&#x201C;I made this Emendation when I publish'd my <sc>Shakespeare </sc><i>restor'd</i>. and Mr. <i>Pope</i> has thought fit to embrace ...

    ... ut two lines before, a word synonimous to <i>bauds</i>, and the very title that Shakespeare gives to Pandarus in his [<i>Tro.</i> 5.10.33 (3570)]; the words <i> ...
156) Commentary Note for line 594:
594 Not of {that die} <the eye> which their inuestments showe

    ... nk, to the white vestments of a priest,<small> as in the only other place where Shakespeare uses it</small>&#8212;[<i>2H4, </i>4.1.45 (1913)], &#8216;<small>Who ...

    ... ed does not indicate their real nature. The only other instance of this word in Shakespeare (<i>2H4</i> 4.1.45) also refers to vestments of a colour which belie ...

    ... >Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "clothes, vestments. On the only other occasion when Shakespeare employs this word, [<i>2H4</i> 4.1.45 (1913)], it appears in the cou ...
157) Commentary Note for line 596:
596 Breathing like sanctified and pious bonds

    ... ds. have &#8216;&#8212;<i>pious</i> bonds<i>,' &amp;c.&#8212;</i>Mr. Singer (<i>Shakespeare Vindicated</i>, &amp;c. p. 261) says that &#8216;Theobald's correcti ...

    ... has been suspected of error by several commentators; but see how it is used in Shakespeare in other passages we have here cited.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla ...

    ... ing of <i>bawds</i> as <i>bonds</i> can be accounted for on the assumption that Shakespeare wrote <i>bauds</i>, a spelling common enough at the time and found, ...
158) Commentary Note for line 599:
599 Haue you so slaunder any moment leasure {D1}

    ... 4, p. 209): &#x201C;It is absolutely necessary to print &#8216;moment's.' Would Shakespeare have employed such a ridiculous inversion, when &#8216;leisure momen ...

    ... uncalled for, and most assuredly erroneous:&#8212; [quotes]. It is doubtful if Shakespeare would have <i>squander </i>here, indeed it is rarely used at all by ...
159) Commentary Note for line 604:
604 Ham. The ayre bites {shroudly, it is very colde.} <shrewdly: is it very cold?>

    ... e </hanging><para>604 ff<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rpt. in the<i> Bristol Gazette</i>, 11 Nov ...

    ... in the nice distinctions and parenthetical sentences of this speech of Hamlet, Shakespeare takes them completely by surprise on the appearance of the Ghost, wh ...
160) Commentary Note for line 610:
610 Wherein the spirit held his wont to walke {A florish of trumpets }

    ... ttention. Having aroused the interest of his audience in the Ghost once again, Shakespeare employs the most arresting means available in his theatre to direct ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches