<< Prev     1.. 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 [29] 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ..75     Next >>

281 to 290 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 80 characters of context... Expand Context
281) Commentary Note for lines 1192-93:
1192-3 Pol. You know sometimes | he walkes foure houres together
    ... on <i>for</i> is specious. But Elze (<i>Shakespeare Jahrbuch</i>, B. xi) has sho ...
282) Commentary Note for lines 1218-19:
1218-9 Ham. For if the sunne breede maggots in a dead dogge, | being a
    ... tly; but I think, with Mr. Malone, that Shakespeare had not any of that profound ...
    ... orld goes' [[1215]] and the Sun &amp;c, Shakespeare would have given some hint,  ...
    ... re, serve, in our opinion, to show that Shakespeare intended the actor should ma ...
283) Commentary Note for lines 1219-20:
1219-20 good kissing carrion. | Haue you a daughter?
    ...  abound in the world.  He observes that Shakespeare &#8216;had an art not only o ...
    ... h the author!'  The critic remarks that Shakespeare 'had an art not only of acqu ...
    ... re, serve, in our opinion, to show that Shakespeare intended the actor should ma ...
    ... so contriving a spirit of expression as Shakespeare exhibits.</para> <para>  &#x ...
    ... e means rather more than it expresses.  Shakespeare uses it in the same sense in ...
    ... o read, these words. See by Ingleby, <i>Shakespeare Hermeneutics</i>, p. 159.</p ...
284) Commentary Note for lines 1234-5:
1234-5 Ham. Slaunders sir; for the satericall {rogue} <slaue> sayes heere, | that old
    ... mer's pamphlet will hardly believe that Shakespeare was able to have read the or ...
    ... <sc>Farmer</sc> (ed. 1778): &#x201C;Had Shakespeare read Juvenal in the original ...
    ...  the mistake in the <i>latter</i>, that Shakespeare could not possibly have read ...
    ... : but one may remark once for all, that Shakespeare wrote for the <i>people</i>; ...
    ... l rogue</i>' Warbuton will have it that Shakespeare means Juvenal, and refers to ...
    ... ast as probable, without attributing to Shakespeare any unusual amount of origin ...
    ... e</b>] <sc>Jenkins </sc>(ed. 1982): "If Shakespeare had meant a reference to Juv ...
285) Commentary Note for lines 1243-4:
1243-4 Pol. Though this be madnesse, | yet there is method in't, will you
    ... umour</i> shows a verbal echo of a play Shakespeare is known to have acted in :  ...
    ...  and how subtle are her answers!'   Did Shakespeare then play Thorello (Kitely), ...
286) Commentary Note for lines 1247-8:
1247-8 Pol. Indeede that's out of the ayre; | how pregnant sometimes
    ... n's Folio 1616, and in the Quarto 1601. Shakespeare acted in Jonson's play; perh ...
287) Commentary Note for lines 1273-4:
1273-4 Guyl. Happy, in that we are not {euer} <ouer->happy on For|tunes {lap} <Cap>,
    ... f a wreath and it may well be asked, if Shakespeare had not in his mind's eye a  ...
288) Commentary Note for lines 1304-5:
1304 <very substance of the Ambitious, is meerely the shadow>
1305 <of a Dreame.>
    ...  here], the <i>dream of a shadow</i>.'  Shakespeare applies it only to &#8216;th ...
    ... <sc> Neil</sc> (ed. 1877): &#x201C;Here Shakespeare plays with a commonplace of  ...
289) Commentary Note for lines 1309-12:
1309 < Ham. Then are our Beggers bodies; and our Mo->
1310 <narchs and out-stretcht Heroes the Beggers Shadowes:> 1310
1311 <shall wee to th'Court: for, by my fey I cannot rea->
1312 <son?>
    ... sc>Johnson</sc> (ed, 1765):  &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare </i>seems  here to design a  ...
    ... eggar's dreams.'   Johnson thought that Shakespeare designed &#8216;a ridicule o ...
290) Commentary Note for lines 1342-3:
1342-3 ther, I haue of late, but wherefore | I knowe not, lost all my mirth,
    ... services.</para> <para>&#x201C;At first Shakespeare used prose very sparingly, c ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


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