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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 551) Commentary Note for line 1909:1909 That no reuenew hast but thy good spirits... <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1881): “Here, and generally, though not always, in Shakespeare, <i>revenue </i> has the account on the second syllable. And so, I ...
... rd</b>] <sc>Clark</sc> & <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "In all other passages Shakespeare accents this word on the second syllable, as we do."</para></cn> <cn ...
553) Commentary Note for line 1912:1912 And crooke the pregnant hindges of the knee... ln1</sc></hanging> <para>1912 <sc>Clark</sc> & <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): "Shakespeare has here unconsciously made a bold use of the figure synecdoche, whe ...
... 4th and 5th, Sh'ath Quarto 6th); ‘distinguish her election' is decidedly Shakespearian, and may be what the poet wrote. The use of a cognate accusative i ...
... be what the poet wrote. The use of a cognate accusative is a marked feature of Shakespeare's diction. ‘of men,' too, joins better to ‘election' tha ...
... end, fuse together'. It surely is of OE. origin and we can possibly assume that Shakespeare wrote ‘co-melded', which fits his meaning precisely.”</ ...
556) Commentary Note for line 1924:1924 In my harts core, I in my hart of hart... have become a cat rather than a king.' <sc>War. </sc></para> <para>“Poor Shakespear! your anomalies will do you no service, when once you go beyond Mr. W ...
... ; or the Passions of Love</i>, 1604 — in which he notices ‘friendly Shakespeare's tragedies' and ‘Prince Hamlet' — borrows the idea of h ...
... assion's slave, which runs as a steady theme through the plays and sonnets that Shakespeare wrote toward the end of Elizabeth's reign, his sympathies repeatedly ...
... of my Soule," &c.--See my Remarks on Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare, p. 214.--Mr. Knight declares himself "not convinced" by what I have ...
558) Commentary Note for line 1949:1949 Ham. Excellent yfaith,... 8216;the bird Taurus hath <i>a great voice</i>, but a small body;' and Lyly and Shakespeare both say, the empty vessel gives or makes the greatest sound.” ...
559) Commentary Note for line 1953:1953 Ham. No, nor mine now my Lord.... > m<sc>mal1</sc></sigla><para>1953 <sc>Malone</sc> (m<sc>mal1</sc>): “As Shakespeare gives the customs & mannors of his own country to all <tab> </ta ...
560) Commentary Note for line 1958:1958 Pol. I did enact Iulius Cæsar, I was kild i'th Capitall,... ed this passage to show that Chaucer uses <i>bodkin</i> for <i>dagger</i>, like Shakespeare. See p. 240.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1843<tab> </tab>col ...
... . Malone thinks that there was an English play on the same subject previous to Shakespeare's. Caesar was killed in <i>Pompey's portico</i>, and not in the Cap ...
... s to the place of Caesar's death appears in Chaucer, <i>Monkes Tale</i>, and in Shakespeare's <i>Julius Caesar</i>. So Fletcher, <i>The Noble Gentlemen</i>, V. ...
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