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181 to 190 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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181) Commentary Note for line 633:
632 633 Haue burst their {cerements?} <cerments,> why the Sepulcher,
    ... is usually, but not always, accented by Shakespeare on the first syllable.&#x201 ...
    ... t Steevens and Malone suggest that here Shakespeare licentiously cast aside its  ...
    ... newly adopted into English (possibly by Shakespeare himself). This can be seen f ...
182) Commentary Note for line 634:
634 Wherein we saw thee quietly {interr'd} <enurn'd,>
    ... , which also appears in Q1.  No one but Shakespeare could have created so strong ...
    ... nerary urn.  It has been suggested that Shakespeare wrote 'enurned' during revis ...
183) Commentary Note for line 635:
635 Hath op't his ponderous and marble iawes,
    ...  (Matthew 12.39-40), and concludes that Shakespeare has 'fused the imagery of se ...
184) Commentary Note for line 637:
637 That thou dead corse, againe in compleat steele
    ...  the verse is accented. See Schmidt, <i>Shakespeare Lexicon</i> pp. 1413-1415. C ...
185) Commentary Note for line 638:
638 Reuisites thus the glimses of the Moone,
    ... st, or nearly so, in the sense in which Shakespeare here uses it. The following  ...
186) Commentary Note for line 639:
639 Making night hideous, and we fooles of nature
    ...  writers, cannot justly be charged upon Shakespeare as vulgar and ignorant. In t ...
    ... . On the other hand, he seems to excuse Shakespeare on the ground that his image ...
    ...  an instance of what we get so often in Shakespeare viz. irregularity of syntax  ...
187) Commentary Note for line 640:
640 So horridly to shake our disposition
    ... sc>Clarendon: </sc>This word is used by Shakespeare not only in its modern sense ...
188) Commentary Note for line 648:
648 It {waues} <wafts> you to a more remooued ground,
    ...  Knight. But there can be no doubt that Shakespeare in these three places used < ...
    ... 1C;gestures by waving its hand or arm. 'Shakespeare is thinking in terms of the  ...
189) Commentary Note for line 655:
655 And for my soule, what can it doe to that {D2}
    ... well as many other passages, shows that Shakespeare does not mean to represent H ...
190) Commentary Note for line 660:
660 That {bettles} <beetles> ore his base into the sea,
    ... erives from <i>beetle brows, </i> which Shakespeare was not the first to ascribe ...
    ... e bushy eyebrows.  As <i>OED</i> notes, Shakespeare coined the verb 'beetle' fro ...
    ... jects itself, threateningly overhangs.  Shakespeare seems to have made up this v ...
    ... d, (iii) with an authority no less than Shakespeare behind it, the new word/mean ...
    ... result: we get a new word/meaning which Shakespeare never intended.&#x201D;</par ...

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