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601 to 610 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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601) Commentary Note for lines 3205-07:
3205-6 man, good, if the man goe to this <wa-> | <ter and> {water &} drowne himselfe, it is will {M2}
3206-7 he, nill he, he goes, | marke you that{,}<?> but if the water come to him, &
    ... es s. Nill und Will I, nillI.&#8212;Bei Shakespeare kommen nur noch die Redensar ...
602) Commentary Note for line 3211:
3211 Clowne.I marry i'st, Crowners quest law.
    ... . Collectively 4. Enquiry; examination [Shakespeare all above def.] 5. Request;  ...
    ... sages in this scene. Yet I know not how Shakespeare could have come to the knowl ...
    ...  to supose that such a book appeared to Shakespeare as it does now to the unprof ...
    ... Sir John <sc>Hawkins</sc>suggested that Shakespeare here designed a ridicule on  ...
    ... igger's dabbling with legal subtleties, Shakespeare has satirised those who figu ...
    ... ed to by Gay, who wrote a century after Shakespeare lived.  &#8216;To shew their ...
    ... ighteenth century. Malone suggests that Shakespeare may have heard of the case i ...
603) Commentary Note for lines 3217-18:
3217-8 more then theyr euen {Christen:}<Christi|an.> Come my spade, there is no aunci-
    ... ch aber nach Collier's Versicherung bei Shakespeare und seinen Zeitgenossen kein ...
    ... surance, one finds no second example in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Nare ...
604) Commentary Note for line 3245:
3245 <Enter Hamlet and Horatio a farre off.> 3245
    ... nity, it would occur to every reader of Shakespeare to see what Portia has to sa ...
605) Commentary Note for lines 3249-50:
3249-50 Goe get thee | {in, and} <to Yaughan,> fetch mee a soope of liquer.
    ... . v.4) &#8216;a few, one <i>Yohan</i>.' Shakespeare got Johan along with the oth ...
    ... alliwell's Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare p. 88 wissen, zum Globusthea ...
    ...  81-2)). <small>Another fancy would see Shakespeare here translating into Danish ...
606) Commentary Note for lines 3252-55:
3252 In youth when I did loue did loue, {Song.}
3253 Me thought it was very sweet
3254 To contract ô the time for a my behoue,
3255 O me thought there {a} was nothing {a} meet.
    ... C;This line has no sense, and doubtless Shakespeare made it untintelligible, in  ...
    ... ine 62 [3253] has no meaning. Doubtless Shakespeare meant this in accordance wit ...
    ... ;And tract of time'. Surely, then, what Shakespeare meant him to sing was &#8216 ...
    ...  course need not, have been designed by Shakespeare in fitting the song to the d ...
607) Commentary Note for lines 3263-66:
3263 {Clow. } But age with his stealing steppes {Song.}
3264 hath {clawed} <caught> me in his clutch,
3265 And hath shipped me {into} <intill> the land,
3266 as if I had neuer been such. 3266
    ... k&#246;mmling Platz machen m&#252;ssen. Shakespeare folgt hierbei einer barbaris ...
    ... ich must make room for the new arrival. Shakespeare follows here a barbaric cust ...
608) Commentary Note for lines 3267-68:
3267-8 Ham. That skull had a tongue in it, and could sing | once, how the
    ... de Granada, comparison with which shows Shakespeare characteristically elaborati ...
609) Commentary Note for lines 3268-69:
3268-9 knaue iowles it to the ground, as if {twere} <it | were> Caines iawbone, that did the
    ... ropriety and force of effect with which Shakespeare uses words, and words of eve ...
610) Commentary Note for lines 3269-70:
3269-70 first {murder, this} <murther: It> | might be the pate of a pollitician, which this asse {now}
    ... ed. 1890): &#x201C;This word is used by Shakespeare in only four other places: [ ...
    ... c>Herford</sc> (ed. 1900): "The word in Shakespeare suggests Machiavelism."</par ...

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