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331 to 340 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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331) Commentary Note for line 1689:
1689 That your good beauties be the happy cause
    ... </sc> (ed. 1866): &#x201C;&#8216;Surely Shakespeare wrote &#8216;<i>beauty' </i> ...
    ... urely, says Walker, Crit. Exam. I, 252, Shakespeare wrote <i>beauty</i> and perh ...
332) Commentary Note for line 1710:
1710 Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,
    ... has put into the hands of his hero, but Shakespeare has left his author unnamed, ...
    ... id that this soliloquy was suggested to Shakespeare by a book of Jerome Cardan D ...
333) Commentary Note for lines 1711-12:
1711 Whether tis nobler in the minde to suffer
1712 The slings and arrowes of outragious fortune,
    ...  the tides as though to terrify them.   Shakespeare could have found this in Abr ...
    ...  <i>Nichomachean Ethics</i>, III. 7).   Shakespeare does not disagree with this; ...
334) Commentary Note for line 1713:
1713 Or to take Armes against a sea of troubles,
    ... much solicitude about this metaphor. <i>Shakespeare  </i>breaks his metaphors of ...
    ... ily pronounces, &#8216;Without Question Shakespeare wrote &#8212; &#8216;Against ...
    ... arity of Expression as an Argument that Shakespeare was conversant with &#198;sc ...
    ... om <i>&#198;schylus</i>, to prove, that Shakespeare is not singular in the use o ...
    ... t by the metaphor's having been used by Shakespeare in other places. So in Timon ...
    ...  pen of one, whose living comments upon Shakespeare have never been equalled, an ...
    ... cribe them as having fallen asleep.  If Shakespeare has gone rather further than ...
    ...  but not the only one of which the good Shakespeare is guilty.&#x201D;&lt;/f. 22 ...
    ... vid Garrick, who, in his Oration at the Shakespeare Jubilee, 1769, rises from th ...
    ... ara>&#x201C;We may safely conclude that Shakespeare never committed a blunder of ...
    ... her words, they are not the lines which Shakespeare wrote.</para> <para>&#x201C; ...
    ... duced resembles expressions employed by Shakespeare in other places. With regard ...
    ... for form's sake to show was employed by Shakespeare on more occasions than one.< ...
    ...  enough with the tendency manifested by Shakespeare and all men of great wit to  ...
    ...  and &#8216;[Greek text].'</para> <para>Shakespeare himself, I may add, has simi ...
    ... uch a contest, is decisive that neither Shakespeare nor Hamlet had in his head a ...
    ... gt;&lt;p. 40&gt; from &#8216;Pericles,' Shakespeare shows a consistency in the m ...
    ... 867, p. 291): &#x201C;Though we meet in Shakespeare with incongruities as great  ...
    ... ty by armed combats with the sea, which Shakespeare might have found in Abraham  ...
    ... nslation of Aelian, 1576. But elsewhere Shakespeare has &#8216;sea of joys,' &#8 ...
335) Commentary Note for line 1721:
1721 When we haue shuffled off this mortall coyle
    ... lled his <i>spoil.</i>--- It is to this Shakespeare alludes; and the words <i>sh ...
    ... hment to those poets could have induced Shakespeare to deal so largely in a spec ...
336) Commentary Note for line 1724:
1724 For who would beare the whips and scornes of time,
    ... of manners.  We may be sure, then, that Shakespeare wrote: &#8216;-<i>-the whips ...
    ... son for altering the Text as it stands; Shakespeare is of all Authors the most l ...
    ... uch straining, we may well suppose that Shakespeare meant, by the <i>Whips and S ...
    ... History of the Rebellion</i>, Prologue. Shakespeare himself seems to use <i>time ...
337) Commentary Note for line 1726:
1726 The pangs of {despiz'd} <dispriz'd> loue, the lawes delay,
    ... d doubtless several others, in England. Shakespeare had probably some personal e ...
    ... delay' and how personally concerned the Shakespeare family had been in experienc ...
338) Commentary Note for line 1729:
1729 When he himselfe might his quietas make
    ... p; in such a connection as to show that Shakespeare was acquainted with its use  ...
339) Commentary Note for line 1730:
1730 With a bare bodkin; who would <these> fardels beare,
    ... ny words which have been degraded since Shakespeare wrote.&#x201D;</hanging></cn ...
340) Commentary Note for line 1731:
1731 To grunt and sweat vnder a wearie life,
    ... rsion on the writer of the Soliloquy of Shakespeare in the Universal Magazine, h ...
    ... ill turn to the second folio edition of Shakespeare printed in 1632 you will fin ...
    ... e, it is absolutely <i>certain</i> that Shakespeare could never have used that o ...

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