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

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151) Commentary Note for line 575:
575 {Wrong} <Roaming> it thus{)}<,> you'l tender me a foole.
    ... er much . . . and will not be mended.'  Shakespeare refers to a horse as a &#821 ...
152) Commentary Note for line 581:
581 Pol. I, {springs} <Springes> to catch wood-cockes, I doe knowe
    ...  of the foregoing speeches of Polonius, Shakespeare meant to bring out the senil ...
    ... catch a woodcock', S788): characters in Shakespeare use the word derogatively of ...
153) Commentary Note for line 583:
583 {Lends} <Giues> the tongue vowes, these blazes daughter
    ... hese blazes, daughter, mark you.' or D. Shakespeare never introduces a catalecti ...
154) Commentary Note for line 588:
588 Set your {intreatments} <entreatments> at a higher rate
    ... ntreaments</i>, a rare word not used by Shakespeare elsewhere."</para></cn>  <cn ...
155) Commentary Note for line 593:
593 Doe not belieue his vowes, for they are brokers
    ... this Emendation when I publish'd my <sc>Shakespeare </sc><i>restor'd</i>. and Mr ...
    ... o <i>bauds</i>, and the very title that Shakespeare gives to Pandarus in his [<i ...
156) Commentary Note for line 594:
594 Not of {that die} <the eye> which their inuestments showe
    ... small> as in the only other place where Shakespeare uses it</small>&#8212;[<i>2H ...
    ... The only other instance of this word in Shakespeare (<i>2H4</i> 4.1.45) also ref ...
    ... ments.  On the only other occasion when Shakespeare employs this word, [<i>2H4</ ...
157) Commentary Note for line 596:
596 Breathing like sanctified and pious bonds
    ... s<i>,' &amp;c.&#8212;</i>Mr. Singer (<i>Shakespeare Vindicated</i>, &amp;c. p. 2 ...
    ... commentators; but see how it is used in Shakespeare in other passages we have he ...
    ... be accounted for on the assumption that Shakespeare wrote <i>bauds</i>, a spelli ...
158) Commentary Note for line 599:
599 Haue you so slaunder any moment leasure {D1}
    ... essary to print &#8216;moment's.' Would Shakespeare have employed such a ridicul ...
    ... ous:&#8212; [quotes]. It is doubtful if Shakespeare would have <i>squander </i>h ...
159) Commentary Note for line 604:
604 Ham. The ayre bites {shroudly, it is very colde.} <shrewdly: is it very cold?>
    ... > </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rp ...
    ... cal sentences of this speech of Hamlet, Shakespeare takes them completely by sur ...
160) Commentary Note for line 610:
610 Wherein the spirit held his wont to walke {A florish of trumpets }
    ... f his audience in the Ghost once again, Shakespeare employs the most arresting m ...

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