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811 to 820 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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811) Commentary Note for line 2743+20:
2743+20 {This is th'Imposthume of much wealth and peace,}
    ... 65, pp. 75-6): &lt;p. 75&gt;&#x201C;How Shakespeare may have acquired his medica ...
    ... was in common use for <i>abscess</i> in Shakespeare's time. <small>It is a corru ...
    ... nward swelling full of corrupt matter.' Shakespeare uses the word in two other p ...
812) Commentary Note for line 2743+22:
2743+22 {Why the man dies. I humbly thanke you sir.}
    ... t's madness is sheer feigning, and that Shakespeare fully intended him to not on ...
813) Commentary Note for line 2743+26:
2743+26 {How all occasions doe informe against me,}
    ... #8212; to introduce which was evidently Shakespeare's only objection in writing  ...
    ... s very hour, cannot the critics of this Shakespearian masterpiece&#8212; includi ...
814) Commentary Note for line 2743+27:
2743+27 {And spur my dull reuenge. What is a man} {K3v}
    ...  course, a commonplace of the time; but Shakespeare's phrasing of it is remarkab ...
815) Commentary Note for line 2743+30:
2743+30 {Sure he that made vs with such large discourse} 2743+30
    ... nch of Amyot in his Plutarch: with whom Shakespeare was much familiar.&#x201D;</ ...
816) Commentary Note for line 2743+31:
2743+31 {Looking before and after, gaue vs not}
    ... n (cf. <sc>334</sc> <sc>ln</sc>). Among Shakespeare's contemporaries cf. Bright  ...
817) Commentary Note for line 2743+33:
2743+33 {To fust in vs vnvsd, now whether it be}
    ... y. The word does not occur elsewhere in Shakespeare. It is perhaps formed from & ...
818) Commentary Note for line 2743+34:
2743+34 {Bestiall obliuion, or some crauen scruple}
    ... e verb to <i>craven</i> is also used by Shakespeare and others.&#x201D;</para></ ...
819) Commentary Note for line 2743+39:
2743+39 {Sith I haue cause, and will, and strength, and meanes}
    ... ithence, since. Compare [4.7.3 (3009)]. Shakespeaee uses all these forms without ...
820) Commentary Note for line 2743+42:
2743+42 {Led by a delicate and tender Prince,}
    ... 6;young Fortinbras.' But the laxness of Shakespearean technique in matter of thi ...
    ... on <i>tender</i> at 1.3.102-8 [569] and Shakespeare plays on 'tender heir' and ' ...

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