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191 to 200 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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191) Commentary Note for line 662:
662 Which might depriue your soueraigntie of reason,

    ... , seated in your mind.' So that he throws his image forcibly before his reader, Shakespeare leaves it to him to arrange more than his pronouns and articles, and ...

    ... larke</sc> &amp; <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): &#x201C;here used elliptically (as Shakespeare uses some verbs) to express &#8216;deprive you of' . . . .&#x201D;</ ...

    ... present used with the same construction as <i>bereave</i> or <i>rob; </i>but in Shakespeare it corresponds to our <i>ablate</i>. [<i>to take away</i>]. Thus in ...
192) Commentary Note for line 663+1:
663+1 {The very place puts toyes of desperation}

    ... lor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;These lines are unique to Q2, Edwards argues that Shakespeare intended to delete them 'as confusing Horatio's main point' (Edwards ...
193) Commentary Note for line 669:
669 And makes each petty {arture} <Artire> in this body

    ... >669<tab> </tab><b>arture</b>] <sc>Bucknill </sc>(1860, p. 259): &#x201C; . . . Shakespeare entertained the medical opinion of his day, that the arteries were u ...

    ... ture</b>] <sc>Clarke</sc> &amp; <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): &#x201C;<small>Here Shakespeare distinctly associates the <i>arteries </i>with the <i>nerves.</i> </ ...
194) Commentary Note for line 670:
670 As hardy as the Nemeon Lyons nerue;

    ... ed. 1904): &#x201C;sinew, muscle <small>(= Latin. <i>nervus</i>); never used by Shakespeare in the modern sense. Milton (<i>Sonnet </i>17), translating the word ...
195) Commentary Note for line 681:
681 Enter Ghost, and Hamlet.

    ... , though technically the stage is cleared. &#x201C;At such a critical juncture Shakespeare will not want the impetus of the action to be checked, as it will b ...
196) Commentary Note for line 686:
686 When I to {sulphrus} <sulphurous> and tormenting flames

    ... ition (e.g. <i> Locrine, </i> 3.6.51, 'burning sulphur of the Limbo-lake'). But Shakespeare sheds the classical allusions customary with Kyd and others, while r ...
197) Commentary Note for line 693:
693 Ham. What?

    ... /sc> (1746, pp. 333-4): &lt;p.333&gt; &#x201C;It ought not to be forgotten that Shakespeare has many words, either of admiration or exclamation, &amp;c. out of ...
198) Commentary Note for line 694:
694 Ghost. I am thy fathers spirit,

    ... oned in this line [762], &#8216;Unhousel'd, unanointed, unaneal'd.' But whether Shakespeare may thence be deemed a favourer of popish principles, remains a matt ...

    ... ts, who are &lt;/p. 104&gt; &lt;p. 105&gt; usually the most reticent of beings. Shakespeare in this part of the play was probably rewriting Kyd.&#x201D; &lt;/p. ...
199) Commentary Note for line 695:
695 Doomd for a certaine tearme to walke the night,

    ... lic spirits. This passage is relied on along with 762 by those who contend that Shakespeare gives us a 'Catholic' ghost. Against them Battenhouse, emphasizing t ...
200) Commentary Note for line 696:
696 And for the day confind to fast in fires,

    ... 47&gt; the <i><sc>Latines</sc></i>, <i>exurier igni</i>. Whoever will allow <sc>Shakespeare </sc>to have imitated any Passages of the <i>Ancients</i>, will, I b ...

    ... either by <i>fasting</i> here, or by <i>burning</i> hereafter. This Opinion <i>Shakespeare </i>again hints at, where he makes <i>Hamlet</i> say; &#8216;<i>He t ...

    ... n to give a regular account of the place of future torment. Chaucer is jocular, Shakespeare serious. <sc>Steevens</sc>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1773<tab> ...

    ... c] in conformity to some such old theological notion, and in practical justice, Shakespeare makes Hamlet's father fast in purgatory, for his offence was fullnes ...

    ... Wyll of the Devyll</i> (for which see the notes <i>ad l. </i>in the <i>Varior. Shakespeare </i>[v1821]), he &#8216;should have supposed we ought to read &#8216 ...

    ... bl. l. no date. </small>(for which see the notes <i>ad l. </i>in the <i>Varior. Shakespeare </i>[v1821]), he &#8216;should have supposed we ought to read &#8216 ...

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