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Contract Context Printing 80 characters of context... Expand Context 721) Commentary Note for line 3719_372:3721 But since he is {better} <better'd>, we haue therefore ods. 3721... n my Introduction to an edition for the Shakespeare Association of Silve's <i>Pa ...722) Commentary Note for line 3722_372:3724-5 Ham. This likes me well, | these foiles haue all a length. <Prepare to play.>... the length of swords and daggers, which Shakespeare might probably allude to. Se ...723) Commentary Note for line 3731_373:3731 The King shall drinke to Hamlets better breath,3732 And in the cup an {Onixe} <vnion> shall he throwe,... b>union</b>] <sc>Furnivall</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions 1877- ...... f, as we have seen frequently happened, Shakespeare did not count his minim-stro ...... Holland's Pliny, ix. 35). Another which Shakespeare presumably knew is that of S ...724) Commentary Note for line 3746_374:3747 Laer. Well, againe. {Florish, a peece goes off.}... hamber</i>: “As most students of Shakespeare know, on 29 June 1613, the G ...725) Commentary Note for line 3756_375:3756 Quee. Hee's fat and scant of breath.3757 {Heere Hamlet take my} <Heere's a> napkin rub thy browes,3758 The Queene carowses to thy fortune Hamlet.... in the two former of these characters, Shakespeare might have put this observat ...... t. 1989, 5:6:185): “Do you think Shakespeare thought about such things as ...... want to point out in this section that Shakespeare lends a hand not to the appa ...... “It is ludicrous to suppose that Shakespeare is referring to the increasi ...726) Commentary Note for line 3776_377:3776 Laer. Haue at you now.3777 <In scuffling they change Rapiers.>... <i>Punch</i>, 1875, p. 255; Sprague, <i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i>, pp. 179- ...... off his guard, their normal purpose in Shakespeare is to serve as a warning to ...727) Commentary Note for line 3791_379:3792 Treachery, seeke it out.... ds. delete. But if an editor is to help Shakespeare out, he should not remove a ...728) Commentary Note for line 3819:3819 That are but mutes, or audience to this act,... mance, is discussed by Anne Righter, <i>Shakespeare and the Idea of the Play</i> ...729) Commentary Note for line 3825_382:3825 Hora. Neuer belieue it;3826 I am more an anticke Romaine then a Dane,3827 Heere's yet some liquer left.... like the old Romans, from whose history Shakespeare knew such examples of suicid ...730) Commentary Note for line 3831_383:3832 If thou did'st euer hold me in thy hart,3833 Absent thee from felicity a while,... we have seen1, of that misprint is that Shakespeare employed the not uncommon sp ...
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