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321 to 330 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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321) Commentary Note for lines 1610-11:
1610 Vpon whose property and most deare life,
1611 A damn'd defeate was made: am I a coward,
    ... licentiously  used by the old writers.  Shakespeare  in another  play employs  i ...
    ...  licentiously used by the old writers.  Shakespeare in another play employs it y ...
322) Commentary Note for lines 1627-8:
1627-8 And fall a cursing like a very drabbe; | a {stallyon,} <Scullion?> fie vppont, foh.
    ... </i>, there is only one more passage in Shakespeare where this interjection occu ...
323) Commentary Note for line 1629:
1629 That guilty creatures sitting at a play,
    ... c>Upton</sc> (1748): &#x201C;'Tis plain Shakespeare alludes to a story told of A ...
    ... . 293-5): &#x201C;'Tis probable that <i>Shakespeare </i>had the following incide ...
    ... > (ed. 1877): &#x201C;&#8216;'Tis plain Shakespeare alludes to a story told of A ...
    ... lder).  It was perhaps the influence of Shakespeare as well as such examples fro ...
324) Commentary Note for line 1632:
1632 They haue proclaim'd their malefactions:
    ... gy for Actors,' 1612, reprinted for the Shakespeare Society, p. 57.  The same st ...
325) Commentary Note for line 1637:
1637 Ile tent him to the quicke, if a {doe} <but> blench
    ... <sc>Halliwell</sc> (ed. 1865): &#x201C; Shakespeare seems to use blench in the s ...
326) Commentary Note for line 1644:
1644 More relatiue then this, the play's the thing
    ...  (Dec.1-Dec.3, 1772: 4): &#x201C;Though Shakespeare was not unacquainte with the ...
    ... g the contending parties.  We know that Shakespeare assisted Jonson in writing i ...
327) Commentary Note for lines 1650-1:
1650 Grating so harshly all his dayes of quiet
1651 With turbulent and dangerous lunacie?
    ...  and Cleopatra, i. 1.18.   Elsewhere in Shakespeare the verb is used intransitiv ...
328) Commentary Note for line 1661:
1661 Ros. Niggard of question, but of our demaunds
    ... burton forgets that by <i>question,</i> Shakespeare does not usually mean <i>int ...
    ... urton has very happily conjectured that Shakespeare wrote the very opposite in q ...
    ... i>niggard</i> should change places. But Shakespeare probably intended to make th ...
    ...  there marked instances of madness does Shakespeare allow his characters to wand ...
329) Commentary Note for lines 1671-2:
1671 And he beseecht me to intreat your Maiesties
1672 To heare and see the matter.
    ... d. 1872):  "many verbs were employed by Shakespeare with both the strong and the ...
330) Commentary Note for line 1681:
1681 Affront Ophelia; her father and my selfe,<(lawful espials)>
    ... le passages throughout his dramas) that Shakespeare was not at all solicitous ab ...

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