391 to 400 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... re the refitting of this play was done. Shakespeare was wont to say that he neve ...
392) Commentary Note for lines 2120-23: 2120-1 Ham. So you mistake
{your} husbands.
| Beginne murtherer,
<Pox> leaue
2121-2 thy damnable faces and | begin, come, the croking Rauen doth bellow
2122-3 for {reuenge} <Re-| uenge>.
... 1C;Theobald proposed the same in his <i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, however, he lo ...
... > Singer is “vindicating” Shakespeare from “the interpolati ...
... <b>Rauen</b>] <sc>Malleson</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions</i>, ...
... f buried Denmark” '—<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions</i>, ...
... ry of the Queen's Men, to which company Shakespeare probably belonged before 159 ...
... rau</sc> (ed. 1909): “Of course, Shakespeare wrote the whole of the inter ...
... was available. The question is whether Shakespeare was content to resort to thi ...
... One would think it no more likely that Shakespeare once and again created a fal ...
394) Commentary Note for lines 2132-35: 2132-3 Ham.
{A} <He> poysons him i'th Garden
{for his} <for's> estate, his
| names
Gonza-
2133-4 go, the story is extant, and {written in very} <writ in> choice | Italian, you shall see
2134-5 anon how the murtherer gets the | loue of Gonzagoes wife.
... , such as Bandello's and Cinthio's, but Shakespeare may well have taken it from ...
... [it was] her father's office.” Shakespeare thus impresses upon us that ...
396) Commentary Note for lines 2146-50: 2146-7 {Thus} <So> runnes the world away.
| Would not this sir & a forrest of fea-
2147-8 thers, if the rest of | my fortunes turne Turk with me, with <two> prouinciall
2149-50 Roses on my {raz'd} <rac'd> shooes, get me a fellowship in a cry | of players? <sir.>
... suppose Sophocles' white shoe was what Shakespeare in Hamlet, Act 3 [2149], cal ...
... > Singer is “vindicating” Shakespeare from “the interpolati ...
... phrase to express apostacy of any kind. Shakespeare uses it again in <i>Ado</i> ...
... Steevens and other critics thought that Shakespeare probably wrote raised shoes, ...
... #x201C;share, partnership; like the one Shakespeare had with the Chamberlain's M ...
... the company, on twenty shares; of which Shakespeare owned four, while some other ...
... ng not only in its familiar allusion to Shakespeare as a ‘deserveing man,' ...
... cal property a joint-stock affair. Thus Shakespeare himself was a stockholder in ...
... nnot help thinking, with Mr. Pope, that Shakespeare alluded to the well-known fa ...
... <i>pa-jock</i> (<i>paiock</i>), and how Shakespeare could have become acquainted ...
... ys the writer of the article ‘New Shakespeare Interpretations' (<i>Ed, Rev ...
... ntribution, though one may wonder where Shakespeare got his knowledge of these n ...
... . All that happened, I believe, is that Shakespeare spelt ‘peacock' withou ...
... ubitable instances of its occurrence in Shakespeare texts. Among many other sugg ...
... “There seems to be no doubt that Shakespeare wrote ‘paiock' and it ...
... (Natural History, cent. ii § 161). Shakespeare uses the word again in <i>MN ...
... es Hamlet call for the recorders? True, Shakespeare knew that recorders would be ...
400) Commentary Note for lines 2175-78: 2175-6 Ham. Your wisedome should shewe it selfe more
{richer} <ri-|cher> to signifie
2176-7 this to {the} <his> Doctor, for, for mee to put him | to his purgation, would
2177-8 perhaps plunge him into <farre> | more choller.
... “much more rich or resourceful. Shakespeare and his contemporaries often ...