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171 to 180 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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171) Commentary Note for line 621+11:
621+11 {By their ore-grow'th of some complextion}
    ...  "dominant element in a man's make-up.  Shakespeare alludes to the old idea, sti ...
172) Commentary Note for line 621+13:
621+13 {Or by some habit, that too much ore-leauens}
    ...  this as one of only three instances in Shakespeare in which habit has its ordin ...
173) Commentary Note for line 621+17:
621+17 {His vertues els be they as pure as grace, }
    ... 16;His' of the quartos, which after all Shakespeare may have inadvertently writt ...
    ... r. He is thinking of himself, or rather Shakespeare is asking us to think of him ...
    ... &#8216;the stamp of <i>one</i> defect', Shakespeare seems to have forgotten that ...
174) Commentary Note for line 621+20:
621+20 {From that particuler fault: the dram of eale}
    ... ld English as should not be father'd on Shakespeare by meer conjecture; and then ...
    ... uns <i>ad libitum</i>, were frequent in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. We h ...
    ... uns <i>ad libitum</i>, were frequent in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. We h ...
    ... h</i>: it may be asked, then,&#8212;did Shakespeare (who occasionally has provin ...
    ... h</i>: it may be asked, then,&#8212;did Shakespeare (who occasionally has provin ...
    ... o reproach. It might have been heard by Shakespeare in his country strollings, b ...
    ... #8212;[quotes].</para> <para>&#x201C;If Shakespeare wrote &#8216;oft debase' it  ...
    ... n that case we may perhaps imagine that Shakespeare wrote the next line&#8212;&# ...
    ... otes 753-4]. </para> <para>&#x201C;Thus Shakespeare would mean to say here, &#82 ...
    ... whole lump.' As to drown, it is used by Shakespeare in the sense of &#8216;o'erw ...
    ...  hence reasonably be questioned whether Shakespeare ever wrote <i>doubts</i> in  ...
    ... rs. These are the only four passages in Shakespeare where the word &#8216;douts  ...
    ... of the Scottish &#8216;deil' for devil. Shakespeare was writing English; and the ...
    ... e are difficulties about attributing to Shakespeare in this context a hypothetic ...
    ... e distinction between life and fiction. Shakespeare does not deliberately write  ...
    ... ct to <i>often</i>  on the grounds that Shakespeare is referring to something th ...
175) Commentary Note for line 621+21:
621+21 {Doth all the noble substance of a doubt}
    ... x201C;It seems to me most probable that Shakespeare wrote:&#8212; &#8216;Doth al ...
    ... f the old editions that, if it was what Shakespeare wrote, we can hardly conceiv ...
176) Commentary Note for line 624:
624 Ham. Angels and Ministers of grace defend vs:
    ... s-guided Actor was all the while (as <i>Shakespeare </i>terms it) tearing a Pass ...
    ... ulting in the great genius. Garrick and Shakespeare have acknowledged each other ...
    ... through a third party, through mankind. Shakespeare would have it thus, and this ...
    ... e rather than of apprehension. No doubt Shakespeare had often heard among his to ...
    ... riate guardians of the faithful. . . .' Shakespeare drops the phrase 'of salvati ...
    ... ve spirits as identical ('angels are'), Shakespeare differentiates them ('angels ...
    ... race, which seems to be Calvin's sense. Shakespeare has Hamlet use the name in a ...
    ... . This is standard Protestant doctrine. Shakespeare borrows the term in question ...
177) Commentary Note for line 627:
627 Be thy {intents} <euents> wicked, or charitable,
    ... &#8216;<i>events</i>.' Why, I know not. Shakespeare was wont to use words in the ...
178) Commentary Note for line 628:
628 Thou com'st in such a questionable shape,
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
179) Commentary Note for line 631:
631 Let me not burst in ignorance, but tell
    ...  seems more reasonable to conclude that Shakespeare could use the same expressiv ...
180) Commentary Note for line 632:
632 Why thy canoniz'd bones hearsed in death
    ... lf. This seems to be the usual sense in Shakespeare (e.g. <i>R3</i> 1.2.2; <i>MV ...

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