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981 to 990 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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981) Commentary Note for lines 3290-91:
3290-1 where be his {quiddities} <Quiddits> now, his | {quillites,} <Quillets?> his cases, his tenurs, and his

    ... <para> provides the following definition for quillets in a brief comparison of Shakespeare's uses of the term in his various plays, including this passage, whi ...

    ... nature of a statute staple, are not obsolete. The term <i>fine</i>, as used by Shakespeare in this passage, signified an amicable agreement or composition of a ...

    ... chees.</para> <para>&#x201C;The reader will from this explanation perceive that Shakespeare has used the terms <i>recovery</i> and <i>double voucher</i> not ind ...

    ... ith &lt;/p/10&gt;&lt;p.11&gt; dirt. From the follliwng passages it appears that Shakespeare uses the term fne in that sense: [quotes <i>AWW</i>, Act 4, Scene 4, ...

    ... &#8216;Quiddits' is a contraction of &#8216;quiddities;' which word is used by Shakespeare. [<i>1H4</i> 1.3.45 (158)], where Falstaff says to Prince Hal, &#821 ...

    ... sacre at Paris, I, 8: &#8216;<i>And ipse dixi with this quiddity</i>.' Rushton, Shakespeare a Lawyer, p. 7&#8212;11</small>).&#x201D;</para></cn><cn> <hanging>< ...
982) Commentary Note for lines 3291-92:
3291-2 tricks? why | dooes he suffer this {madde} <rude> knaue now to knocke him a-

    ... one, I think, can reasonably doubt that the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inferior redaings here come from the better ...
983) Commentary Note for lines 3295-96:
3295-6 Land, with his Statuts, his recog|nisances, his fines, his double vou- 3295
3296 chers, his recoueries,

    ... , see Blackstone, book 2, c.19, and appendix 5 to vol. 2; also Lord Campbell on Shakespere's Legal Knowledge (ad locum), and As You Like It, pag3 39, note 3.&#x ...

    ... check Campbell's text . See Nick's entry in the Bib: Rushton, William Lowes, <i>Shakespeare's Legal Maxims</i>. Liverpool: Henry Young &amp; Sons, 1907. BL She ...

    ... &#8216;Shakespeare's Legal Acquirements,' London, 1858&#x201D; [in (<i>William Shakespeare</i>, 1876). Rushton, however, cautions readers against using Cambel ...

    ... prose that they have not the appearance of quotations.&#x201D; In his opinion, Shakespeare's correct translations of legal maxims are &#x201C;the only satisfac ...

    ... secure ((see the full account in Clarkson and Warren, <i>The Law of Property in Shakespeare</i>, pp. 128-30)).&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1987<tab> </tab>< ...

    ... , To paye twenty thousand sheeld anon. should receiue my statute safely. c1600 SHAKES. Sonn. cxxxiv. 9. 1602 Ham. V. i. 113 This fellow might be in's time a g ...
984) Commentary Note for line 3313:
3313 Ham. I thinke it be thine indeede, for thou lyest in't.

    ... 01D; [The word play between <i>to lie </i>=lying and =to lay is a common one in Shakespeare.]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1872<tab> </tab><sc>del4</sc></sigla><hang ...
985) Commentary Note for lines 3316-18:
3316-7 Ham. Thou doost lie in't to be in't & say {it is} <‘tis> thine, | tis for the dead,
3317-8 not for the quicke, therefore thou | lyest.

    ... <i>&#x201C;</i>This practice of abridging clauses with <i>to</i> often leads in Shakespeare to occasions for error. So in [[<i>R2</i> 2.1.94 (736-37)] <i>Now he ...
986) Commentary Note for lines 3328-29:
3328-9 Ham. How absolute the knaue is, we must speake | by the card, or

    ... e, or <i> book of manners </i> , of which more than one were published during Shakespeare's age.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1862<tab> </tab><sc>n&amp;q ...

    ... eans either a chart or a map. See Gosson's School of abuse (ed. Collier for the Shakespeare Society, p. 4, and Thomas Heywood, If you know not me, you know nobo ...

    ... 4, and Thomas Heywood, If you know not me, you know nobody (ed. Collier for the Shakespeare Society), p. 153.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1883<tab> </tab><s ...

    ... all find in him the continent of what parts a gentleman would see.' 5.2.114. In Shakespeare, <i>card</i> does not mean the graduated compass card or 'fly,' bec ...

    ... ean either the seaman's chart, or the face of the compass. It is not clear that Shakespeare meant definitely the one or the other either here or in <i>Macbeth</ ...
987) Commentary Note for lines 3329-30:
3329-30 equiuocation will vndoo vs. By the | Lord Horatio, {this} <these> three yeeres I

    ... e of those idioms of indefinite time, of which we have pointed out instances in Shakespeare. See Note 51, Act ii[1193].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1872<tab ...

    ... &#8212;jetzt drei Jahre.&#x201D; [&#x201C;<i>this three years</i> of the Qs. is Shakespearean for three years now.&#x201D;]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1877<tab> </ ...

    ... > (ed. 1980): &#x201C;deliberate use of ambiguity in words. It was notorious in Shakespeare's time as a device, attributed to the Roman Catholics, for taking oa ...
988) Commentary Note for lines 3330-31:
3330-1 haue {tooke} <taken> note of it, | the age is growne so picked, that the toe of the

    ... to which Hamlet had been supposed to allude, had ceased long before the time of Shakespeare; nor is it probably that he would have transferred it to the age of ...

    ... eir luxurious extravagance. These strained repartees are frequently employed by Shakespeare, with the view of painting the actual tone of the society in his day ...

    ... ieht es f&#228;lschlich auf die geschn&#228;belten Schuhe, die &#252;berdies zu Shakespeare's Zeit l&#228;ngst wieder abgekommen waren. Nares s. Picked. Douce I ...

    ... nts it falsely as a pointed shoes which were appearing for a long time again in Shakespeare's time. Nares, see picked; Douce II, 263. Schlegel: "The old days ar ...

    ... x201C;This use of the past tense for the participle ((Abbott 343)) is common in Shakespeare. F modernizes ((as also at [3361, 3374].&#x201D;</para></cn><cn> <ha ...
989) Commentary Note for lines 3331-33:
3331-3 pesant | coms so neere the {heele} <heeles> of {the} <our> Courtier he galls his | kybe. How
3333 long hast thou been <a> Graue-maker? 3333

    ... . &#8216;If &#8216;twere a <i>kibe</i>, &#8216;twould put me to my slipper.' <i>Shakespeare</i> [cites <i>Hamlet</i>] &#8216;One boast of the cure, calling them ...
990) Commentary Note for lines 3338-39:
3338-9 very day that young Hamlet was borne: hee | that {is} <was> mad and sent into
3339 England.

    ... ely remarks that &#8216;It is probably that, in the reconstruction of the play, Shakespeare perceived that the general depth of Hamlet's philosophy indicated a ...

    ... at any rate the early part of the play, that Hamlet is little more than twenty. Shakespeare may have revised the text to suit a particular actor and, as Bradley ...

    ... twenty years (([3362])). Whether the number of Hamlet's years was of concern to Shakesepare, or should be to us, is perhaps another matter. It is not incompatib ...

    ... rty, Horatio, who had memory of the combat ((76-7])), considerably more. Either Shakespeare, as Blackstone supposed, here forgot what he wrote in the first act, ...

    ... Yet is not a much more plausible theory, though one commonly put forward, that Shakespeare proclaimed Hamlet to be thirty in order to suit the character he fou ...

    ... s age would be more difficult to credit than such dramatic na&#239;vet&#233; on Shakespeare's part. It is clear, moreover, that Shakespeare still not only speak ...

    ... h dramatic na&#239;vet&#233; on Shakespeare's part. It is clear, moreover, that Shakespeare still not only speaks but thinks of him as young&#8212;witness the f ...

    ... t </i>adhers. The sexton's thirty years belong to his role, not to Hamlet's. If Shakespeare had been concerned to impress his hero's age upon us, it would have ...

    ... rs that separate Hamlet from his boyhood; and that this loss of boyhood is what Shakespeare associates with them is confirmed in <i>The Winter's Tale</i>when Le ...

    ... king the clown say later (([3351-2])) that he has been sexton for thrity years, Shakespeare pointedly tells us that Hamlet is thirty. A similar late fixing of t ...

    ... Hamlet as younger than thirty. It seems unnecessary to speculate, however, that Shakespeare here underlines Hamlet's increasing maturity. But if he <i>is</i> th ...

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