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1 to 10 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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1) Commentary Note for line 1:
The Tragedie of 0{B1r} <nn4v>
H A M L E T
Prince of Denmarke.
1 <Actus Primus. Scœna Prima.> 1.1
    ...  some <i>hearsay particulars concerning Shakespeare </i>from a MS. of <i>Aubrey< ...
    ... e us that for [<i>Hamlet</i>'s plot] <i>Shakespeare </i>must have read <i>Saxo G ...
    ...  us, that for [<i>Hamlet</i>'s plot] <i>Shakespeare </i>must have read <i>Saxo G ...
    ... ntiments indeed there are none, that <i>Shakespeare </i>could borrow; nor any ex ...
    ... orious tragedians,' and very plainly at Shakespeare in particular,&#8212;&#8216; ...
    ... orious tragedians,' and very plainly at Shakespeare in particular,&#8212;&#8216; ...
    ... s, though in a mutilated form,' &amp;c. Shakespeare <i>Commentaries</i>, vol. ii ...
    ... bert Cohn's curious volume. entitled <i>Shakespeare in Germany in the Sixteenth  ...
    ...  1947): &#x201C;The other play in which Shakespeare devotes a whole act to expos ...
2) Commentary Note for lines 3-4:
3-4 Bar. VVHose there?
    ... lly depends; and indeed so artfully has Shakespeare wrought upon his great patro ...
    ... ud </i>Furness, ed. 1877): &#x201C;That Shakespeare meant to put an effect in th ...
    ... /sc>, ed. 1844): &#x201C;In nothing has Shakespeare been more successful, than i ...
    ... them with a supernatural acuteness; and Shakespeare was not unmindful of the fac ...
3) Commentary Note for lines 5-6:
5-6 Fran. Nay answere me. Stand and vnfolde | your selfe.
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
4) Commentary Note for line 12:
12 Fran. For this reliefe much thanks, tis bitter cold,
    ... hich strikingly exemplifies how careful Shakespeare was to preserve entire consi ...
    ... )], &#8216;Thy much goodness.' Abbott's Shakespeare Grammar, &#167; 51.</para> < ...
5) Commentary Note for line 13:
13 And I am sick at hart.
    ... k at hart</b>.] <sc>Kliman </sc>(1996): Shakespeare may be demonstrating that th ...
6) Commentary Note for lines 16-17:
16 Bar. Well, good night:
16-17 If you doe meete Horatio and | Marcellus,
17 The riualls of my watch, bid them make hast.
    ... on, it is plain, by <i>rivals</i>, that Shakespeare means, those men who were ap ...
    ...  languages. This is the only passage of Shakespeare in which the word is employe ...
7) Commentary Note for line 23:
23 Mar. O, farwell honest {souldiers} <Soldier>, who hath relieu'd you?
    ... ning, and it is conclusive to show what Shakespeare intended. The reverie of Mar ...
8) Commentary Note for line 27:
27 Bar. Say, what is Horatio there?
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
9) Commentary Note for line 30:
30 {Hora.} <Mar.> What, ha's this thing appeard againe to night?
    ... . 127&gt;Yet for Derrida, the figure of Shakespeare as a night-watchman on the r ...
10) Commentary Note for line 32:
32 Mar. Horatio saies tis but our fantasie,
    ...  and &#8216;fancy' are commonly used by Shakespeare in this sense. The former is ...
    ... nd Spirits'), 1584. On the dramatic use Shakespeare makes of conflicting contemp ...
 
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