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211 to 220 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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211) Commentary Note for line 733:
733 The will of my most seeming vertuous Queene;
    ... on'; see <i>Son.</i> 135 and 136, where Shakespeare puns on this meaning and his ...
212) Commentary Note for line 743:
743 But soft, me thinkes I sent the {morning} <Mornings> ayre,
    ... tab> <sc>Beckerman</sc> (1977, p. 312): Shakespeare artfully shapes "the action  ...
213) Commentary Note for line 746:
746 Vpon my secure houre, thy Vncle stole
    ... iced the resemblance which the ghost in Shakespeare bears to the ghost of Sich&# ...
214) Commentary Note for line 747:
747 With iuyce of cursed {Hebona} <Hebenon> in a viall,
    ...  Plant, and is certainly the Word which Shakespeare intended.&#x201D;</para></cn ...
    ... t, that it should, when administered as Shakespeare describes, produce the conse ...
    ... : &#x201C;It is doubtful what precisely Shakespeare and his contemporaries meant ...
    ... uice of hebon' as a poison, but even if Shakespeare took it from there and not f ...
    ... ess: the unique form here suggests that Shakespeare may have thought the poison- ...
    ... i>Confess. Am., </i> 4: 3017), and that Shakespeare associated 'hebon' with henb ...
    ... ls show little correspondence with what Shakespeare here describes. Alternative  ...
    ... </i>  with any familiar plant. No doubt Shakespeare drew on what he had heard or ...
    ... non, Hebon, Hebona</i>.  Names given by Shakespeare and Marlowe to some substanc ...
    ... ce' (<i>OED</i>).  It seems likely that Shakespeare took the word from Marlowe,  ...
    ...  with hints of ye a &#8216;braver' one. Shakespeare condenses Lightbourne's last ...
    ... non, Hebon, Hebona</i>.  Names given by Shakespeare and Marlowe to some substanc ...
    ... ce' (<i>OED</i>).  It seems likely that Shakespeare took the word from Marlowe,  ...
215) Commentary Note for line 748:
748 And in the porches of {my} <mine> eares did poure
    ... ing done with henbane (see 747 CN). But Shakespeare probably took the idea from  ...
    ... e effective, but Bullough suggests that Shakespeare took the idea from accounts  ...
216) Commentary Note for line 753:
753 And with a sodaine vigour it doth {possesse} <posset>
    ... s the <small>only passage</small> where Shakespeare uses &#8216;posset' as a ver ...
    ...  like 'take control of' or 'overpower'; Shakespeare uses the verb elsewhere in r ...
217) Commentary Note for line 756:
756 And a most instant tetter {barckt} <bak'd> about
    ...  think that all dermatological words in Shakespeare and in Renaissance discourse ...
218) Commentary Note for line 760:
760 Of life, of Crowne, {of} <and> Queene at once dispatcht,
    ... atch'd' cannot be right, and why should Shakespeare employ a wrong word when ano ...
219) Commentary Note for line 762:
762 2352 Vnhuzled, disappointed, {vnanueld} <vnnaneld>,
    ...  housled</i>, to receive the Sacrament. Shakespeare in Hamlet. Act. I. unhousel' ...
    ... <sc>Heath</sc>, p. 534): &#x201C;See my Shakespeare and Textus Roffensis, p. 294 ...
    ... ra> <para><small> &#x201C;The Lovers of Shakespeare will at least excuse, if the ...
    ... eme unction, or anoint with oil. But as Shakespeare did not use unnecessary word ...
    ... . a. </i>2) &#8211; <small>again a word Shakespeare does not use in this sense e ...
    ... g what they can to explain the words of Shakespeare long before adequate English ...
    ... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
220) Commentary Note for line 765:
765 O horrible, ô horrible, most horrible.
    ... nt without it&#8212;yet I doubt whether Shakespeare intended it.&#x201D;</para>< ...
    ... : I confess I think otherwise; and that Shakespeare intended to keep Hamlet brea ...

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