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941 to 950 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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941) Commentary Note for line 3159:
3159 That showes his {horry} <hore> leaues in the glassy streame,

    ... D;Hoary <i>a.</i> [har, haruny Saxon.]</para> <para><small>3. White with frost. Shakespeare. 4. Mouldy; mossy; rusty; <i>Knolles</i>.&#x201D;</small></para></cn ...

    ... &amp; Marshall</sc>, ed. 1890): &#x201C;Lowell (Among my Books, p. 185) notices Shakespeare's delicate art in drawing our attention to the silvery under-side of ...

    ... p. 283&gt; &lt;p. 284&gt; to see at a glance how much better the F1 reading is. Shakespeare is not likely to have written &#8216;hoary' with with &#8216;glassy' ...
942) Commentary Note for line 3160:
3160 Therewith fantastique garlands did she {make} <come,>

    ... luck to follow Q2 in [3160], though its superiority is obvious at a glance. For Shakespeare intended Ophelia to make her garland of willow, a willow-garland bei ...
943) Commentary Note for line 3161:
3161 Of Crowflowers, Nettles, Daises, and long Purples

    ... fficiently known in many parts of England, and particularly in the county where Shakespeare lived. Thus far Mr. Warner. Mr. Collins adds, that in Sussex it is ...

    ... 1<tab> </tab><sc>Neil </sc>(ed. 1877, Notes): &#x201C;Beisly supplies in his <i>Shakespeare's Garden</i>, p. 159, the following explanation of this line from &# ...

    ... owered orchis (<i>mascula</i>) rather than this, to be the long purple to which Shakespeare refers.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1882<tab> </tab><sc>Elze2</s ...

    ... to the Ragged Robin, Lychnis flos cuculi, L; &#8216; and &#8216;Long Purples of Shakespeare's Hamlet, 4.7, supposed to be the purple flowered Orchis mascula, L. ...

    ... &lt;p. 545&gt; &#x201C;Of these, <i>nettles</i> need little comment:<small> all Shakespeare's other references to them ((eleven)) are notably if unsurprisingly ...

    ... ough the name does not occur in contemporary herbals, have been recognized from Shakespeare's account of them and their names (([3161-2] and nn.)) as a kind of ...

    ... or a plant which has palmate roots, is extended to a species which has not ((<i>Shakespeare's Garden</i>, p. 160)). See also <i>N&amp;Q</i>, x, 225-7; Grindon, ...

    ... eare's Garden</i>, p. 160)). See also <i>N&amp;Q</i>, x, 225-7; Grindon, <i>The Shakespeare Flora</i>, p. 129; Britten and Holland, <i>Dictionary of English Pla ...
944) Commentary Note for line 3162:
3162 That liberall Shepheards giue a grosser name,

    ... l</b>] <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;<i>Liberal</i> is repeatedly used by Shakespeare for <i>loose-tongued</i>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> ...

    ... >a grosser name</b>] <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C; We cannot know which Shakespeare had particularly in mind, but recorded names for the orchis, derived ...
945) Commentary Note for line 3163:
3163 But our {cull-cold} <cold> maydes doe dead mens fingers call them.

    ... Maids</i>, followed by all editors, and rightly. I have no doubt whatever that Shakespeare's copy here made a false start with <i>culd</i>, easily misread as < ...

    ... 987): &#x201C;&#8216;a local name for various species of <i>Orchis</i> . . . in Shakespeare probably the Early Purple Orchis, <i>Orchis mascula</i>' ((<i>OED de ...
946) Commentary Note for line 3164:
3164 There on the pendant boughes her {cronet} <Coronet> weedes

    ... ilson's conclusion is: &#x201C;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 ...
947) Commentary Note for line 3165:
3165 Clambring to hang, an enuious sliuer broke, {M1v}

    ... 8216;slive' or &#8216;sliver,' to strip off, occurs twice in the latter form in Shakespeare. See [<i>Lr.</i> 4.2.34 (0000)]: &#8216;She that herself will sliver ...
948) Commentary Note for line 3169:
3169 Which time she chaunted snatches of old {laudes} <tunes>,

    ... the truest touches of tenderness and pathos. It is a character which nobody but Shakespeare could have drawn, and to the conception of which there is not the sm ...

    ... ether they were also the fashion in England or how &lt;/p. 71&gt; &lt;p. 72&gt; Shakespeare came to know of them is not clear. But it can hardly be questioned t ...

    ... <i>Old Picture Books </i>(pp. 15-22) by Dr. A. W. Pollard. It is possible that Shakespeare had in mind also Psalms cxlviii-cl which are sung at the service of ...

    ... ilson's conclusion is: &#x201C;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 ...

    ... s</i>])) face the difficulty of explaining how it could get into Q2 if not from Shakespeare's ms. See [3158] LN [Longer Notes].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...

    ... s of praise to God' after the improper songs we have heard ((<i>New Readings in Shakespeare</i>, 1956, II, 226)). Perhaps Gertrude is covering up. But crazy hym ...
949) Commentary Note for line 3172:
3172 Vnto that elament, but long it could not be

    ... Gertrude should have watched Ophelia die without lifting a finger to help her. Shakespeare wrote for a theatre audience before the realistic novel had come int ...

    ... that case, the queen's narrative becomes implausible at this point. In view of Shakespeare's total inconsistency about Horatio's awareness of life in Elsinore ...
950) Commentary Note for line 3178:
3178 Laer. Too much of water hast thou poore Ophelia,

    ... stration of the fact that puns were not inappropriate under any circumstance in Shakespeare's time.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1939<tab> </tab>kit2</sc ...

    ... sc>Kittredge</sc> (ed. 1939): &#x201C;This speech seemed far less artificial to Shakespeare's contemporaries than it does to us, for such punning expressions ha ...

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