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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 211) Commentary Note for line 502:502 “The canker gaules the infants of the spring... s Dyce has them on p. 408, see below] </p. 11> <p. 12> The text of Shakespeare will afford authorities, as —[quote among others <i>Ham. </i>5 ...
... . . <b>spring</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "i.e. young plants or shoots. Shakespeare uses the identical phrase at [<i>LLL</i> 1.1.101 (110)]."</para></cn ...
... (ed. 2006): “caterpillar or other insect pest. The word is also used by Shakespeare to mean a disease that consumes people —'cancer' in modern spe ...
212) Commentary Note for line 505:505 Contagious blastments are most iminent,... ts</b>] <sc>Clark & Wright </sc>(ed. 1872): “does not occur again in Shakespeare. Coleridge uses it in the last scene of Zapolya, p. 265: ‘Shal ...
... nts</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "blights causing young growth to wither. Shakespeare associates blasting with the effects of scandal. Compare [<i>MM</i> ...
... ng and a scandalous breath'. The word <i>blastment</i>, not found elsewhere in Shakespeare, seems to be a coinage of his."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></ ...
... Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): “infectious blightings (<i>blastments</i> is a Shakespearean coinage: see [275]n.)”</para> <br/> <hanging><sc>ard3q2</s ...
213) Commentary Note for line 507:507 Youth to it selfe rebels, though non els neare.... e stirring of lust. The verb <i>rebel</i> often has strong sexual overtones in Shakespeare; compare ‘Out upon it, old carrion! Rebels it at these years' ...
... ty which her brother had uttered! Critics have failed to see the art with which Shakespeare here delineates the self-conceited, shallow-principled character of ...
215) Commentary Note for line 510:510 Doe not as some vngracious pastors doe,... 0-14<tab> </tab><b>pastors</b> . . . <b>reed</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "Shakespeare has lost control of his sentence. He has allowed ‘the puffed ...
... eless libertine, is the careless libertine himself. This could not come from <i>Shakespear</i>. The old quarto reads, <i>Whiles </i>a <i>puft and </i>reckless < ...
... ill</i>' for <i>I warrant</i>. This should be well attended to in correcting <i>Shakespear</i>.”</para> <para> “This could not come from <i>Shakes ...
... ng <i>Shakespear</i>.”</para> <para> “This could not come from <i>Shakespear</i>.” </para> <para> <b>Ed. note:</b> But could it come from O ...
217) Commentary Note for line 513:513 Himselfe the primrose path of dalience treads.... se path</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "This familiar phrase appears to be a Shakespearian invention. He evidently liked it, for he went on to use it again ...
... mp; Wright </sc>(ed. 1872): “counsel. . . . <small>Not used elsewhere in Shakespeare</small>. See Chaucer, Canturbury Tales, 1216. ‘Ther was noon o ...
... ot his own counsel. <i>Rede</i> (O.E. rœd), though it occurs only once in Shakespeare, was still in common use.” </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1985<ta ...
... ] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "takes no notice of his own advice (to others). Shakespeare does not use <i>rede</i> elsewhere, though it was common enough in h ...
219) Commentary Note for line 519:519 Occasion smiles vpon a second leaue.... ing goodbye to my father. <i>Occasion</i> (Opportunity) is often personified in Shakespeare. The whole line sounds quasi-proverbial and is perhaps intended to c ...
220) Commentary Note for line 521:521 The wind sits in the shoulder of your saile,... riter, under the initials A. L., considers that the allusion in the text proves Shakespeare to have been a ‘thorough sailor.' In the second note following ...
... sserts that he was a capital herald. What was he not,— this myriad-minded Shakespeare?”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1872<tab> </tab><sc>cln1</sc> </sig ...
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