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641 to 650 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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641) Commentary Note for line 3466:
3466 Ham. I loued Ophelia, forty thousand brothers
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
642) Commentary Note for line 3467:
3467 Could not with all theyr quantitie of loue
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
643) Commentary Note for line 3468:
3468 Make vp my summe. What wilt thou doo for her.
    ... es her! In this case we could wish that Shakespeare himself had thrown a little  ...
644) Commentary Note for line 3471:
3471 Ham. {S'wounds} <Come> shew me what th'owt doe:
    ... erstand providing we have gathered what Shakespeare has set before us in the pre ...
645) Commentary Note for lines 3472-73:
3472 Woo't weepe, woo't fight, {woo't fast,} woo't teare thy selfe,
3473 Woo't drinke vp Esill, eate a Crocadile?
    ... ><i>v</i></small><i>inegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... es are supposed to be impenetrable. Had Shakespeare meant to make Hamlet say &#8 ...
    ...  is more natural, to think &#8212; that Shakespeare sought a river in Denmark, a ...
    ... es are supposed to be impenetrable. Had Shakespeare meant to make Hamlet say &#8 ...
    ... i>eysel</i> for <i>vinegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... ntire army. <i>Ravin up</i>  is used by Shakespeare in <i>Macbeth</i>, and by D' ...
    ... an it is, it is very little likely that Shakespeare was read in the early Danish ...
    ... codile </i>. I am, therefore, confident Shakespeare wrote: Woul't drink up <i>Ni ...
    ... >eisel</i> meant vinegar, nor even that Shakespeare has used it in that sense: & ...
    ... ver <i>Oesil</i> in Denmark, or if not, Shakespeare might think there was. <i>Ys ...
    ... an it is, it is very little likely that Shakespeare was read in the early  Danis ...
    ... e printed. Most editors conjecture that Shakespeare meant the river <i>Yssel</i> ...
    ... Q.A. [Q1] <i>vessels</i> . In any case, Shakespeare had a river in mind, which H ...
    ... all opposed to that interpretation; for Shakespeare has various other passages w ...
    ... rton haben 'eisel' geschrieben, was bei Shakespeare selbst in der Bedeutung 'Ess ...
    ... rte zu sagen, fest &#252;berzeugt, dass Shakespeare 'Nilus' geschrieben hat, wof ...
    ... d Ungeheuern, wovon mehrere Stellen bei Shakespeare selbst Zeugniss ablegen. Mer ...
    ... n have written 'eisel,' which occurs in Shakespeare himself in the sense 'vinega ...
    ... y it in one word, firmly convinced that Shakespeare wrote 'Nilus,' from where on ...
    ... d horrible, from where more passages in Shakespeare himself bear witness. The re ...
    ... e it today demands no elaboration, that Shakespeare nowhere observed so strongly ...
    ... , vinegar; to others, wormwood. Used by Shakespeare to signify a repugnant draug ...
    ... y &#8216;vinegar,' or &#8216;wormwood.' Shakespeare uses it to express a bitter  ...
    ... onstruction very common in the works of Shakespeare and his contemporaries. On t ...
    ... all opposed to that interpretation; for Shakespeare has various other passages w ...
    ... ll>Many</small> editors conjecture that Shakespeare meant the river <i>Yssel</i> ...
    ... Q.A. {Q1] <i>vessels</i> . In any case, Shakespeare had a river in mind, which H ...
    ... i>eysel</i> for <i>vinegar</i>: nor has Shakespeare employed it in any other of  ...
    ... y others agree to accept <i>eysell</i>. Shakespeare says: &#8216;I will drink Po ...
    ... difficult to see how it applies, or why Shakespeare should have been thinking of ...
    ... ;It is extremely doubtful as to weather Shakespeare ever heard of such an obscur ...
    ... </para> <para>&#x201C;Observe how often Shakespeare uses Nile or Nilus in [<i>An ...
    ... of the Nile and crocodile, showing that Shakespeare naturally connected and asso ...
    ... s of course would be more poetical, but Shakespeare did not, in this scene, inte ...
    ... against it: the first of these is, that Shakespeare did not write the word; the  ...
    ... found in the word <i>up</i> a hint that Shakespeare intended t speak of the drin ...
    ... say, &#8216;too funny for anything!' If Shakespeare had known of any animal bigg ...
    ... gerly, quaff. In <i>Sonnets </i>, cxi., Shakespeare names &#8216;potions of eise ...
    ... rk play continued to be performed until Shakespeare was fifteen years old, while ...
    ... o unnoticed point of connection between Shakespeare and the primitive English dr ...
    ... cellence </i>; it is in this sense that Shakespeare himself uses it in <i>Sonn</ ...
646) Commentary Note for line 3474:
3474 Ile doo't, doost <thou> come heere to whine?
    ... inmal.&#x201D; [The artful pause, which Shakespeare allows to enter after <i>I'l ...
647) Commentary Note for line 3482:
3482 {Quee.} <Kin.> This is meere madnesse,
    ... character it is better  suited.  But if Shakespeare designed it for the King, he ...
648) Commentary Note for line 3485_348:
3485 When that her golden {cuplets} <Cuplet> are {disclosed} <disclos'd> 3485
3486 His silence will sit drooping.
    ... ks to remedy this by comparing works of Shakespeare and Milton to the Romantic m ...
    ... 01C;The reliable natural observation in Shakespeare is similar to a brilliant pa ...
    ... nother way of accounting for this fact. Shakespeare knew that the deeper griefs  ...
649) Commentary Note for line 3495_349:
3495 Good Gertrard set some watch ouer your sonne, 3495
3496 This graue shall haue a liuing monument,
    ... ything is most ingeniously contrived by Shakespeare to fan the flame of his rese ...
650) Commentary Note for line 3497:
3497 An houre of quiet {thereby} <shortly> shall we see
    ... and it is obvious that, whether because Shakespeare happened here to form his &# ...
    ... made sense, though not at all the sense Shakespeare had intended. The example is ...

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