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1100 to 1109 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1100) Commentary Note for line 3627_362:
3627-8 signes, and three | liberall conceited carriages, that's the French
3628-9 {bet} <but> a|gainst the Danish, why is this {all} <impon'd as> you call it?
    ...  more authoritative as well as the more Shakespearean and exact. Its occurrence  ...
    ... ion that it stood in the foul papers as Shakespeare's own word, of which <i>impo ...
    ... sric mocked for the use of a word which Shakespeare had elsewhre used quite seri ...
1101) Commentary Note for line 3630_363:
3630-1 {Cour.} <Osr.> The King sir, hath layd {sir,} that in a dozen passes be|tweene
    ... ose, a phrase sufficiently familiar, in Shakespeare's time, to all fencers: its  ...
    ... a dozen&#x201D; was a very vague one in Shakespeare's time, and that if the text ...
    ... e confusion to Osric, here ridiculed by Shakesepare as &#8216;unable to state in ...
    ... e trouble is the tersest thing he says. Shakespeare sometimes leaves plot detail ...
    ... ry hard to believe in as a rendering of Shakespeare's intent.</para> <para>&#x20 ...
    ... in the theatre, and may not have struck Shakespeare, that the two things are not ...
    ... 216;twelve for nine'. The odds are that Shakespeare himself was in a muddle abou ...
1102) Commentary Note for line 3649_365:
3649-50 Hora. This Lapwing runnes away with the shell on his | head.
3651-2 Ham. A did {so sir} <Complie> with his dugge before a | suckt it, thus {has} <had> he and 3651
    ... t whether any alteration be necessary.  Shakespeare seems to have used <i> compl ...
    ... owever, by no means, an unusual term in Shakespeare's time<small>.'</small>  REE ...
    ...  have been caught, or rather copied, by Shakespeare from thence. &#8216;Flatteri ...
    ... owever, by no means an unusual  term in Shakespeare's time.'</para> <para><small ...
    ...  have been caught, or rather copied, by Shakespeare from thence. &#8216;Flatteri ...
    ... owever, by no means an unusual  term in Shakespeare's time.'</para> <para><small ...
    ... 216;comply' is only used three times by Shakespeare&#8212;twice in &#8216;Hamlet ...
    ... i> compliment</i> <small>in the time of Shakespeare</small></para></cn> <cn> <si ...
1103) Commentary Note for line 3652_365:
3652-3 {many} <mine> more of the same {breede} <Beauy> | that I know the drossy age dotes on,
    ...  the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...
1104) Commentary Note for line 3653_365:
3653-4 only got the tune of | the time, and {out of an} <outward> habit of incounter, a
    ... lt;p. 18&gt;may appear to be scarcely a Shakespearian word, has in fact been use ...
    ... f address, behaviour. <i>Obs.</i>  1596 SHAKES. Tam. Shr. IV. v. 54 That with yo ...
1105) Commentary Note for line 3654_365:
3654-5 kind of {histy} | <yesty> colection, which carries them through and through
    ... d</i>.<i> Fond</i> , in the language of Shakespeare's age, signified <i> foolish ...
    ...  Husbandry</i> , p. 18. 76, and 77.  So Shakespeare mentions together the <i> fa ...
    ... enraged: which much better accords with Shakespear's high-charged description th ...
    ... <i>fanned </i>, if <i>to fan</i> is for Shakespeare's period <i>to separate as b ...
1106) Commentary Note for line 3656:
3656 the most {prophane and trennowed} <fond and winnowed> opinions, and doe but blowe 3656
    ... sc>Jennens</sc> (ed. 1773) : &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare</i>  seems to have written < ...
    ... in his Husbandry p. 18. 76 &amp; 77. so Shakespeare mentions together the fan an ...
    ... cur together in other writers, and that Shakespeare has &#8216;the <i>fan</i> an ...
    ... stead, the later, mature<i> fond</i> of Shakespeare.  With such gossipy and outw ...
    ... of the Euphuist or affected courtier of Shakespeare's time, who was a hair-split ...
    ... nd extravagant in expression. Therefore Shakespeare makes <i>Hamlet </i>describe ...
    ...  Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare</i> , p. 220, I maintained t ...
    ... e reading, although Mr. Grant White (<i>Shakespeare's Scholar </i> , &amp;c. p.  ...
    ...  so sind die blasen entzwei. Vgl. Grant Shakespeare's Scholar 421." &lt;/p. 258& ...
    ... re so often coupled in the writings of  Shakespeare's day, and &#8216;fond' [foo ...
    ... 1C;Mr. Grant White in his edition of <i>Shakespeare</i> prints &#8216;<i>fann'd  ...
    ... , instead, later, mature<i> fond</i> of Shakespeare.  With such gossipy and outw ...
    ... ed one, as is so frequently the case in Shakespeare. Osric, and others like him, ...
    ... &#8216;often coupled in the writings of Shakespeare's day,' and &#8216;that &#x2 ...
    ... ty collection, and a repetition of that Shakespearian expression, a &#8216;mould ...
    ... eighty grain of wisdom behind; and what Shakespeare clearly intends to convey, a ...
    ... o say it is too tamely tautological for Shakespeare. Moreover, both these tame t ...
    ... tor could trace out from the letters in Shakespeare's manuscript before his eyes ...
    ...  rate &#8216;trennowed' is easy enough. Shakespeare had a habit sometimes, if th ...
    ... g but a misprint of &#8216;wennowed', a Shakespearian spelling for &#8216;winnow ...
    ... n, viz. that, whatever word it was that Shakespeare wrote, it must have been one ...
    ... &#8216;profond', if written with one of Shakespeare's undersized &#8216;d's, wou ...
    ... eading of a word written by the hadn of Shakespeare himself; and it not only fol ...
    ... itor and also for the idiosyncrasies of Shakespeare's spelling and handwriting.  ...
    ... we owe it probably to Scribe P who knew Shakespeare's handwriting and spelling w ...
    ... l and may have been actually looking at Shakespeare's manuscript as he wrote. It ...
    ...  the error in Quarto is intelligible if Shakespeare wrote <i>pfound</i> or <i>pr ...
    ... rm of approbation. This is supported by Shakespearean usage in such phrases as & ...
    ... n of <i>fond </i>to <i>fanned.</i> That Shakespeare thought of winnowing as effe ...
    ... nd finds her &#8216;chaffless')). Among Shakespeare's contemporaries the synonym ...
    ... at either, postulated as the reading of Shakespeare's manuscript, requires us to ...
    ...  indeed in Markham ((see above)) and in Shakespeare's own <i>MND</i>  ((Q1 [3.2. ...
    ... endation for F's &#8216;fond'. Probably Shakespeare wrote &#8216;fand'. The Q2 c ...
1107) Commentary Note for line 3657_1_3:
3657+1 {Enter a Lord.} 3657+1
3657+2 {Lord. My Lord, his Maiestie commended him to you by young}
3657+3 {Ostricke, who brings backe to him that you attend him in the hall,}
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
1108) Commentary Note for line 3657_4_3:
3657+4 {he sends to know if your pleasure hold to play with Laertes, or that}
3657+5 {you will take longer time?} 3657+5
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
1109) Commentary Note for line 3657_6_3:
3657+6 {Ham. I am constant to my purposes, they followe the Kings plea-}
3657+7 {sure, if his fitnes speakes, mine is ready: now or whensoeuer, pro-}
3657+8 {uided I be so able as now.}
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
    ... nse of the word seems to be confined to Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...

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