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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 11) Commentary Note for line 34:34 Touching this dreaded sight twice seene of vs,... here is therefore no ground for Mr. Warburton's conjecture, that ‘perhaps Shakespeare wrote, <i>spright</i>.' ”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> < ...
12) Commentary Note for line 41:41 And let vs once againe assaile your eares,... d] </hanging><para>41-3<tab> </tab><sc>Deighton</sc> (ed. 1891): “ . . . Shakespeare treats the clause <b>What</b> . . . <b>seen</b> as though it has bee ...
13) Commentary Note for line 46:46 Bar. Last night of all,... rom first to last, is grand and majestick, and maintains an equal Character. <i>Shakespeare </i>has strictly observed that Rule of <i>Horace</i>, Nec Deus inter ...
14) Commentary Note for line 47:47 When yond same starre thats weastward from the pole,... ke</sc> (ed. 1868): “How poetically, and with what dramatic fitness, has Shakespeare introduced this touch to mark time and place! Nothing more natural t ...
... amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): “Astronomers have recently argued that, if Shakespeare had a specific star in mind, he might be alluding to the supernova i ...
15) Commentary Note for lines 51-52:51-52 Mar. Peace, breake thee of, <Enter the Ghost.> | looke where it comes againe.... d by Lawrence (<i>Pre-Restoration Stage Studies,</i> p. 140ff.) and Sprague (<i>Shakespeare and the Actors,</i> p. 128). This, though not perhaps in conflict wi ...
... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>52<tab> </t ...
... d from that word should not be used in a transitive sense. As to <i>harrow, </i>Shakespeare only uses the verb three times; twice in this play, figuratively in ...
... Greg</sc> (1928, <i>apud </i><sc>Munro</sc>, ed. 1958) “conjectures that Shakespeare wrote ‘harows' with the peculiar ‘a' that was liable to ...
17) Commentary Note for line 72:72 Without the sencible and true auouch... ppend -<i>ation, </i>-<i>ure </i>or -<i>ing</i>, to the following words used by Shakespeare as nouns: [quotes only <i>disclose </i>1823 from <i>Ham.</i>]. . . . ...
... rbial (Dent, E264.1; see also B268). (<i>Avouch</i> does not occur as a noun in Shakespeare other than in all three texts of <i>Hamlet</i>, which <i>OED</i> rec ...
18) Commentary Note for line 74:74 Mar. Is it not like the King?... </ehline> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>74-5 <tab> ...
19) Commentary Note for line 78:78 So frownd he once, when in an angry parle... ded in angry words; <i>parle</i><b> </b>and <i>parley</i> are elsewhere used by Shakespeare only of a friendly conference held with a view to coming to an agree ...
... encounter. For although I can cite no parallel for such a use of <i>parle, </i>Shakespeare more than once uses the verb <i>speak, </i>in similar understatement ...
... t editors read—<i>Polack</i>; but the corrupted word shews, I think, that Shakespeare wrote —<i>Polacks.</i>” </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1791-< ...
... ive the word ‘Polacks.' Inasmuch, however, as twice elsewhere in the play Shakespeare employs ‘Polack,' in the singular, to express the Polish peopl ...
... sequent editors read <i>Polack; </i>but the corrupted word shows, I think, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks.</i>' </para> <para>“This conclusion seems t ...
... s conclusion seems to be somewhat weak. Why does the corrupted words show, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks? </i>Why does it not show that he wrote <i>Pole-axe ...
... to have such suppositions printed unless there be added to them a passage from Shakespeare or from one of his contemporaries from which appears that there may ...
... justify their choice with the argument that it “gives the sense of what Shakespeare intended, i.e. that the dead King once <b>smote</b>, i.e. defeated, ...
... e smote the sledded Polack on the ice.' In <i>Hamlet, </i>II. ii [1088, 1100], Shakespeare twice uses ‘Polack' in referring to Poles.</para> <para>ȁ ...
... e word in addressing the reader of <i>Rosalynde.</i></para> <para>“Might Shakespeare have written ‘studded pollax'? In the <i>Færie Queene</i> ...
... d? —Moltke; sledged? —Schmidt; studded? —D. Haley in the <i> Shakespeare Quarterly</i> 29 [1978], pp. 407-13, etc.) would represent in this c ...
... out their braines' (<i>Dido</i>, 2.1.198-9). The 'Greekish lad' is Pyrrhus and Shakespeare drew on this scene for the Player's speech in 2.2 [1494 ff.]. But it ...
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