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21 to 30 of 57 Entries from All Files for "student" in All Fields

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21) Commentary Note for line 829:
829 Ham. Yes by Saint Patrick but there is {Horatio} <my Lord>,

    ... Saint. But it was, I suppose, only said at random; for he makes <i>Hamlet</i> a student of<i> Wittenberg</i>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1765<tab> </tab><sc ...
22) Commentary Note for line 885:
885 The time is out of ioynt, ô cursed spight

    ... ought upon him the wretched necessity which must proclaim her ignominy. Let the student do his best to realize the condition of Hamlet's heart and mind in relat ...
23) Commentary Note for line 1019:
1019 {Florish.} Enter King {and} Queene, Rosencraus and

    ... two young Danish noblemen of the names of Rosencrantz and G&#252;ldenstern were students at Padua in Shakespeare's time; the former in 1587-9, the latter in 160 ...
24) Commentary Note for line 1021:
1021 King. Welcome deere Rosencraus, and Guyldensterne,

    ... hat two young Danish nobleman of the names of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern were students at Padua in Shakespeare's time; the former in 1587-9, the latter in 160 ...
25) Commentary Note for lines 1137-39:
1137 To the Celestiall and my soules Idoll, the most beau-
1137-9 tified O|phelia,| that's an ill phrase, a {vile} <vilde> phrase,

    ... forced jingle for which he aplolgises, and in a note of genuine passsion. The student comes out in the word &#8216;machine,' v. note l. 124&#x201D;</para></cn ...
26) Commentary Note for lines 1448-50:
1448-50 Plautus |too light for the lawe of writ, and the liberty: these are | the

    ... Plautus, Terence, and Seneca, are expressly mentioned as being performed by the students with elegance, magnificence, dignity of action, and propriety of boice ...

    ... ntenance. Malone says, &#8216;The most celebrated actors at Cambridge were the students of St. John's and King's colleges: at Oxford, those of Christ--xhursh. ...

    ... n <i>commedie al improviso</i>.' In Elizabeth's time, it was the custom of the students in the Universities to act Latin plays; and, as Warton remarks, it may ...
27) Commentary Note for lines 1953-54:
1953-4 You playd once | i'th Vniuersitie you say,

    ... i>Imperator</i>, at Cambridge. The most celebrated actors at Cambridge were the students of St. John's and King's colleges: at Oxford, those of Christ-Church. I ...

    ... . </para> <para>&#x201C;The frequent notices of exhibitions of this sort by the students themselves, in addition to the absence of all direct evidence of any su ...
28) Commentary Note for line 2040:
2040 King. Faith I must leaue thee loue, and shortly to,

    ... lation because what follows it could not follow directly what precedes it. Most students of the play accept the fact that no candidate is viable. The play-withi ...
29) Commentary Note for line 2156:
2156 A very very paiock. 2156

    ... adventurous themes and high enterprises. Hamlet and Horatio having been fellow students at Wittenberg, the &lt;/p.228&gt;&lt;p.229&gt; latter had been already ...

    ... dreamt of in his philosophy': All the while referring to what had engaged their student life. In the scene before us they were alone, Horatio comprehends his fr ...
30) Commentary Note for line 2314:
2314 A brothers murther, pray can I not,

    ... ge another as if he knew all they know, that it is desirable here to remind the student that only he, not Hamlet, hears this soliloquy. The falseness of half th ...

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