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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... . . . <b>dies.</b>] <sc>Stearns</sc> (1865, pp. 75-6): <p. 75>“How Shakespeare may have acquired his medical knowledge it is, of course, impossible ...
... > (ed. 1881): “<i>Imposthume</i> was in common use for <i>abscess</i> in Shakespeare's time. <small>It is a corruption of <i>apostem</i>.”</small> ...
... Aposthume: f. An <i>Imposthume</i>; an inward swelling full of corrupt matter.' Shakespeare uses the word in two other places, <i>Ven</i>., 743, and <i>Tro</i>. ...
... n if other were wanting—that Hamlet's madness is sheer feigning, and that Shakespeare fully intended him to not only to be entirely in possession of his s ...
... in the closing soliloquy of this Scene,— to introduce which was evidently Shakespeare's only objection in writing it,—gives us the key to his indeci ...
... ving</i> to the last. And yet, up to this very hour, cannot the critics of this Shakespearian masterpiece— including even Goethe, and Schlegel, and Coleri ...
... ' (Harvey Wood, 3.248). The idea was, of course, a commonplace of the time; but Shakespeare's phrasing of it is remarkably close to Marston's.”</para> </ ...
... ssive faculty: as in the nervous old French of Amyot in his Plutarch: with whom Shakespeare was much familiar.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1813<tab> </tab>v ...
... with his possession of the gift of reason (cf. <sc>334</sc> <sc>ln</sc>). Among Shakespeare's contemporaries cf. Bright (pp. 70-1): ‘If a man were double ...
... (ed. 1872): “grow stale or mouldy. The word does not occur elsewhere in Shakespeare. It is perhaps formed from ‘fusty,' which is derived from the ...
... craven</i> and a villain else.'—The verb to <i>craven</i> is also used by Shakespeare and others.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1864a<tab> </tab><sc>glo ...
... nd <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “sithence, since. Compare [4.7.3 (3009)]. Shakespeaee uses all these forms without any distinction. See [2.2.6 (1026)].&#x ...
... he speaker is decidedly older than ‘young Fortinbras.' But the laxness of Shakespearean technique in matter of this sort has to be taken into account (Cp. ...
... uestions of honour. Polonius has punned on <i>tender</i> at 1.3.102-8 [569] and Shakespeare plays on 'tender heir' and 'tender chorl' in <i>Son</i> 1..”< ...
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