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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 901) Commentary Note for line 3029:3029 Who dipping all his faults in theyr affection,... r absgtracten Eigenschaften wäre ganz beziehunglos und sicherlich nicht in Shakespeare's Geist und Stil. Es sollte, wie ich glaube, gelesen werden: </p. ...
... ≈ Daniel ; ≈ <sc>cln1</sc> (<i>only </i>Ant. //) ; ≈ Elze (<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>) ; ≈ <sc>stratmann</sc></hanging><para>3029<tab> ...
... , not yet explained or amended.' Neither amendment nor explanation is required. Shakespeare never wrote more clearly. The comparison is merely of the great chan ...
... The justification for <i>guilts</i> is threefold. It is graphically plausible. Shakespeare uses <i>guilts</i>, in the plural and meaning ‘crimes', ‘ ...
... lose pent-up guilts'. <i>Guilts</i> corresponds to <i>faults</i> ((l. 19)); and Shakespeare employs the idea of converting <i>faults</i> to <i>graces</i> elsewh ...
... ading of the second folio.” </p. 228><i> (Prolegomena and Notes on Shakespeare</i> [BL ADD. MS. 24495 ] : pp. 219-46)</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <c ...
... i> occurs in Dryden's Palaomon and Arcite, III, 606. See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XVI, 247-49.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1889<tab> ...
903) Commentary Note for line 3034:3034 A sister driuen into desprat termes,... : OED (10. <i>pl.</i> Condition, state, situation, position, circumstances; (in Shakes.) vaguely or redundantly: relation, respect (rarely in <i>sing.</i>). <i> ...
904) Commentary Note for line 3041:3041 That we can let our beard be shooke with danger,... 1778) : “It is wonderful that none of the advocates for the learning of Shakespeare have told us that this line is imitated from Persius, Sat. 2: ‘ ...
... b>] <sc>Clark & Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “Danger is very near when it shakes the beard. See [2.2.559 (1613)]. ‘With' is found in constructions w ...
905) Commentary Note for line 3051:3051 They were giuen me by Claudio, he receiued them... b><i>Claudio</i></b></i>] <sc>Spencer</sc> (ed. 1980): “(an odd name for Shakespeare to use, as the King's name is Claudius).”</para></cn> <tlnran ...
906) Commentary Note for lines 3062-63:3062 King. Tis Hamlets caracter. Naked,3062-3 And in a post|script heere he sayes alone,... ilson's conclusion is: “A study of these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of degradation his verse suffered at the h ...
... ilson's conclusion is: “A study of these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of degradation his verse suffered at the h ...
... “Even <i>whilst so, though so, if so</i>, appear to have been in use. In Shakespeare, [<i>Ham.</i> 4.7.? (3070)] — </p. 345><p. 346> [c ...
... bviously a mistake for ‘<i>checking at</i>,'—a reading much more in Shakespeare's manner than ‘liking not.'” </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>< ...
... >Furness</sc>, ed. 1877): “<small>The Ff </small>reading is much more in Shakespeare's manner than <i>liking not</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>188 ...
910) Commentary Note for line 3077:3077 But euen his Mother shall vncharge the practise,... nd ed. 1760, practise): “<i>v.n.</i> 4. To use bad arts or strategems <i>Shakespeare</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1791-<tab> </tab><sc>rann</sc>< ...
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