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81 to 90 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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81) Commentary Note for line 248:
248 Queene. Good Hamlet cast thy {nighted} <nightly> colour off
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
82) Commentary Note for line 252:
252 Thou know'st tis common all that liues must die,
    ... > (1904, rpt. 1965, p. 214): &#x201C;If Shakespeare had any one passage in view  ...
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
83) Commentary Note for line 254:
254 Ham. I Maddam, it is common.
    ... <tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 18 ...
84) Commentary Note for line 258:
258 Tis not alone my incky cloake {coold} <good> mother
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
85) Commentary Note for line 274:
274 To doe obsequious sorrowe, but to perseuer
    ... vack,</sc> <i>Harvard Conc</i>. (1969), Shakespeare uses <i>obsequious</i> eight ...
    ... ing><para>274<tab> </tab><i>OED</i> has Shakespeare as 1st user of <i>obsequious ...
86) Commentary Note for line 275:
275 In obstinate condolement, is a course
    ...   Apparently introduced into English by Shakespeare and/or Marston in his <i>Ant ...
87) Commentary Note for line 291:
291 You are the most imediate to our throne,
    ... ): &#x201C;As is obvious from the play, Shakespeare regarded the throne of Denma ...
    ... es his intention about the succession.  Shakespeare shows Claudius not as a usur ...
88) Commentary Note for line 292:
292 And with no lesse nobilitie of loue
    ... rt toward </i>a person, is not English; Shakespeare however, is so licentious in ...
    ... ive. But it may well be doubted whether Shakespeare would have used <i>nobility< ...
    ... d, this word should give no difficulty. Shakespeare often describes as 'noble' f ...
89) Commentary Note for line 293:
293 Then that which dearest father beares his sonne,
    ... e</b> omitted in archaic poetry.  . . . Shakespeare rarely indulges in this arch ...
90) Commentary Note for line 294:
294 Doe I impart {toward you for} <towards you. For> your intent
    ... hat by the time he had reached the verb Shakespeare regarded <i>nobility</i> as  ...
    ... aster Goursey'; and it is possible that Shakespeare used <i>impart</i> for 'impa ...

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