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321 to 330 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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321) Commentary Note for line 748:
748 And in the porches of {my} <mine> eares did poure

    ... . 1982): &#x201C;Pliny speaks of this being done with henbane (see 747 CN). But Shakespeare probably took the idea from reports of the actual murder of the Duke ...

    ... method of poisoning would not actually be effective, but Bullough suggests that Shakespeare took the idea from accounts of the murder of the Duke of Urbino in 1 ...
322) Commentary Note for line 749:
749 The {leaprous} <leaperous> distilment, whose effect

    ... 0): &#x201C;distillation causing a disease like leprosy (still fairly common in Shakespeare's England).&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1982 <tab></tab> <sc>a ...

    ... (i.e. covering the skin with white scales). <i>Distilment</i> appears to be a Shakespearian invention, like so many other words in <i>Hamlet</i> that end in < ...

    ... e skin. Q2 has 'leaprous', a spelling it shares with Q1. <i>Distilment</i> is a Shakespearean coinage (see [275 CN]); curiously, Johnson's 1773 error, 'instilme ...
323) Commentary Note for line 751:
751 That swift as quicksiluer it courses through

    ... circulation of the blood. William Harvey was born in 1578, fourteen years after Shakespeare, and his discovery was not published until 1628, twelve years after ...
324) Commentary Note for line 753:
753 And with a sodaine vigour it doth {possesse} <posset>

    ... ; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;This is the <small>only passage</small> where Shakespeare uses &#8216;posset' as a verb.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1877<t ...

    ... , or the like, formerly regarded as a delicacy and as a cure for colds. <small>Shakespeare, characteristically, turns it into a verb defining an effect that is ...

    ... 2006): &#x201C;This must mean something like 'take control of' or 'overpower'; Shakespeare uses the verb elsewhere in relation to sickness or disease, as in 'I ...
325) Commentary Note for line 754:
754 And curde like {eager} <Aygre> droppings into milke,

    ... , <i>Alegar</i>, &amp;c., tho' they are Compounds. Had the original Words of <i>Shakespear</i> been <i>Eager Droppings </i>into Milk, alluding to the Way of mak ...
326) Commentary Note for line 756:
756 And a most instant tetter {barckt} <bak'd> about

    ... covered as with bark, encrusted (the only use of <i>bark</i>, in this sense, in Shakespeare)."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></tab><sc>bev2</sc> </sigla> <h ...

    ... degree of Dr. of Medicine at Copenhagen in Sept. 1994, published <i>Syphilis in Shakespeare's England</i> (London and Bristol, PA: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, ...

    ... t form of acne. The word &#8216;tetter,' used in <i>Hamlet</i> and elsewhere in Shakespeare, is a good example of this ambiguity. Fabricius tends to think that ...

    ... le of this ambiguity. Fabricius tends to think that all dermatological words in Shakespeare and in Renaissance discourse have a syphilitic connotation. Thus in ...
327) Commentary Note for line 760:
760 Of life, of Crowne, {of} <and> Queene at once dispatcht,

    ... queen, at once dispatch'd.' &#8216;Dispatch'd' cannot be right, and why should Shakespeare employ a wrong word when another, that is unobjectionable, at once p ...

    ... vers </sc>(ed. 1929): &#x201C;a deviation from the more usual meaning for which Shakespeare's contemporaries were prepared.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>193 ...
328) Commentary Note for line 762:
762 2352 Vnhuzled, disappointed, {vnanueld} <vnnaneld>,

    ... r, the Addition of it is such a manifest and absurd <i>Tautology</i>, as <i><sc>Shakespeare</sc></i> could not be guilty of. We must therefore have Recourse to ...

    ... l as the boldness of these editors who have chang'd it.' <i>Observations on</i> Shakespear, p. 181.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 230&gt;</para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Dodd i ...

    ... uses the word frequent[ly], as <i>to ben housled</i>, to receive the Sacrament. Shakespeare in Hamlet. Act. I. unhousel'ed, i.e. not having received the Sacrame ...

    ... us, <i>disappointed</i>, that is, prevented from making any preparation, or, as Shakespear elsewhere calls it, <i>ap</i>- &lt;/p.533&gt; &lt;p.534&gt; <i>pointm ...

    ... Critic. Observ. p. 189, to be the true import of the word. Mr. Theobald in his Shakespear restored, p. 52-55 agrees in approving the same reading, though after ...

    ... ueld</b>] <sc>Tollet</sc> (ms. notes in <sc>Heath</sc>, p. 534): &#x201C;See my Shakespeare and Textus Roffensis, p. 294.&#x201D; </para> <para>762<tab> </tab>< ...

    ... : 2): &#x201C;This line has exercised the critical Abilities of every Editor of Shakespear; and no one has yet, in my Opinion, explained the true Sense of the A ...

    ... e and common in all Authors.</small></para> <para><small> &#x201C;The Lovers of Shakespeare will at least excuse, if they will not admit the Propriety, of this ...

    ... 6;Death-struck, unprepared, unanointed.'</para> <para>&#x201C;Most probably, in Shakespeare's Time, those Words borrowed from other Languages, and adapted to ou ...

    ... ld</b>] <sc>Jennens</sc> (ed. 1773): &#x201C;It is hardly to be doubted that <i>Shakespeare</i> wrote <i>unanoil'd</i>. To <i>anoil</i> was a common phrase in u ...

    ... he epistle, </i>&amp;c. '</para> <para>&#x201C;And lest it be objected, that <i>Shakespeare, </i>who in general makes use of the word <i>anoint</i>, would have ...

    ... gation of that which has perplexed the most eminent commentators on the text of Shakespeare. The antiquary is desired to consult the edition of Fabian, printed ...

    ... e different opinions sent you, upon the true reading of that well known line of Shakespeare, &#8216;Unhouseld. unannointed, unanneald' My reading (I confess) ha ...

    ... ' My reading (I confess) has not been very extensive, but I have been told that Shakespeare's plays were not left in writing by himself, but collected after his ...

    ... e different Opinions sent you, upon the true Reading of that well-known Line of Shakespere, &#8216;Unhouseld, unanointed, unanneald.' My reading ( I confess) ha ...

    ... My reading ( I confess) has not been very extensive, but I have been told that Shakespeare's Plays were not left in Writing by himself, but collected after his ...

    ... gation of that which has perplexed the most eminent commentators on the text of Shakespeare. The antiquary is desired to consult the edition of Fabian, printed ...

    ... us Protestant. 1 &lt;/p. 463&gt;</para> <para>Note to Flir: <i>Briefe &#252;ber Shakespeare's Hamlet</i>, p. 118: in his index, Elze identifies Flir as a Cathol ...

    ... ented upon the passage, was to give extreme unction, or anoint with oil. But as Shakespeare did not use unnecessary words, <i>anele </i>must be supposed to have ...

    ... the <i>housel</i> (i.e. eucharist) &#8211; <small>a word not used elsewhere by Shakespeare.</small>"</para> <br/><hanging><sc>oxf4</sc>: standard gloss; <i>OE ...

    ... sion and received absolution (<i>OED ppl. a. </i>2) &#8211; <small>again a word Shakespeare does not use in this sense elsewhere.</small>"</para> <br/><hanging ...

    ... rom the beginning of the 14th centre; <small>but <i>unaneled</i> is yet another Shakespearian coinage. Line [762] as a whole makes one realize how much the str ...

    ... 8, p. 137): &#x201C;We find editors doing what they can to explain the words of Shakespeare long before adequate English lexicographical resources were availabl ...

    ... the three sacraments as Kilroy does. </para> </cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...

    ... ara> </cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging>Holderness </hanging> <para>762 <tab> < ...
329) Commentary Note for line 765:
765 O horrible, ô horrible, most horrible.

    ... f Energy to Hamlet, who is too long silent without it&#8212;yet I doubt whether Shakespeare intended it.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1773<tab> </tab><sc>gent ...

    ... ible, &amp;c.' should be given to Hamlet: I confess I think otherwise; and that Shakespeare intended to keep Hamlet breathless with attention and horror, till t ...
330) Commentary Note for line 766:
766 If thou hast nature in thee beare it not,

    ... n coming to resemble Claudius, Hamlet is driven to forget this distinction, and Shakespeare, I think, asks us to see the cost of this forgetting. . . ." </para> ...

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