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551 to 560 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields

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551) Commentary Note for line 2881:
2881 That both the worlds I giue to negligence,

    ... int where he is equally unconcerned about this world and about the one to come. Shakespeare uses <i>both the worlds</i> in this sense also in <i>Mac</i>. [3.2.1 ...
552) Commentary Note for line 2896:
2896 And like the kind life-rendring {Pelican} <Politician>,

    ... loured skin.' In <i>R2</i> [2.1.126 (770], and King <i>Lr</i>. [3.4.76 (1857)], Shakespeare uses the same illustration, but in a contrary sense. <small>F1 has a ...

    ... rals to her young ones to eat'; <i>Edward III</i>, iii, 110-113 (ed. Brooke, <i>Shakespeare Apocrypha</i>, p. 90): &#8216;A Pellican, my Lord, Wounding her boso ...
553) Commentary Note for line 2901:
2901 And am most {sencibly} <sensible> in griefe for it,

    ... 201D; [<i>sensible in grief</i> resembles the <i>Err</i>. [4.4.27 (1308)] where Shakespeare says, <i>You are sensible in nothing but blows</i>. Editors generall ...
554) Commentary Note for line 2902:
2902 It shall as leuell to your iudgement {peare} <pierce>

    ... eare,' then &#8216;leuell' must refer to taking aim in shooting, an image which Shakespeare is fond of and employs in this very play, viz. 2628+3. Moreover, &#8 ...

    ... .2.122 (124+14)]. On the other hand, &#8216;leuell' may mean plain or open with Shakespeare &lt;/2:275&gt;&lt;2:276&gt; (cf. <i>2H4</i> [4.4.7 (2377)], &#8216;e ...

    ... ll come as sharply home to your judgment as daylight strikes the eye.' I assume Shakespeare wrote &#8216;pearce', and that Q2's &#8216;peare' is a misprint.&#x2 ...
555) Commentary Note for lines 2923-25:
2923 Oph. You must sing {a downe} <downe> a downe,
2923-4 And you call | him a downe a. O how the wheele becomes it,
2924-5 It is | the false Steward that stole his Maisters daughter.

    ... ab> </tab><b>a downe a downe</b>] <sc>Steevens</sc> (ed. 1778): &#x201C;Perhaps Shakespeare alludes to <i>Ph&#339;be's Sonnet</i>, by Tho. Lodge, which the read ...

    ... ): &#x201C;This is likewise the burden of a song. <i>Steevens </i>thinks, that Shakespeare alludes to <i>Phoebe's Sonnet</i>, by Tho. Lodge, which the reader m ...

    ... ihr Ungl&#252;ck zuzuschreiben hat.&#x201D; [O how well the wheel fits it! That Shakespeare knew the wheel as an instrument of torture is mentioned by S. Johnso ...
556) Commentary Note for lines 2927-29:
2927-8 Oph. There's Rosemary, thats for remembrance, | pray {you} loue re-
2928-9] member, and there is {Pancies} <Paconcies>, thats for | thoughts.

    ... g giebt, w&#228;hrend sie mit dem Bruder noch den Fenchel theilt.&#x201D; [That Shakespeare places a deeper meaning in this language of the flowers cannot be do ...

    ... e us daie and night; Wishing that I might always have You present in my sight.' Shakespeare has several allusions to <i>rosemary</i>. Compare <i>WT</i>. [4.4.74 ...

    ... (ed. 1903): &#x201C;The quaint misprint of the Folio for <i>pansies</i>, which Shakespeare appropriately makes his maiden's fancy associate with what Greene sa ...

    ... ous significance. (1) The custom on which this episode is based is also used by Shakespeare in <i>WT</i> [4.4.74-76 (1880-82)]; and there is no apparent reason ...

    ... ifferent circumstances. Flower symbolism flourished in Elizabethan England; and Shakespeare had already made use of it in <i>R2 </i>(3.4.I04-6 (1917-19)]. Much ...
557) Commentary Note for lines 2930-31:
2930-1 Laer. A document in madnes, thoughts and {remembrance} <remem-| brance>fitted. 2930

    ... is the etymological one of instruction (<i>doceo</i>). The word is not used by Shakespeare in any other place.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1891<tab> </tab> ...

    ...
2932-3 Ophe. There's Fennill for you, and Colembines, there's | Rewe for
2933-4 you, & heere's some for me, we may call it | {herbe of Grace} <Herbe-Grace> a Sondaies,
2934-5 <Oh> you {may} <must> weare your Rewe | with a difference, there's a Dasie, I would
2935-7 giue you | some Violets, but they witherd all when my Father {dyed,} <dy-| ed:>, 2935
2937 they say

    ... : &#x201C;Rue seems to have been also constantly called &#8216;herb of grace.' Shakespeare so terms it in <i>R2</i> [3.4.104-107 [(1916-19)] Vol. iv. p. 181:&# ...

    ... 1858): &#x201C;Rue <small>was</small> constantly called &#8216;herb of grace.' Shakespeare so terms it in &#8216;Richard II.' <small>Vol. iii. p. 280</small>: ...
559) Commentary Note for line 2945:
2945 His beard {was} as white as snow,

    ... Marston, and Chapman. See Dodsley's Old Plays, last edit. vol. vi. p. 223. Both Shakespeare and the authors of &#8216;Eastward Ho!' probably adopted the words o ...

    ... </tab>col3</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>col3 = col1 </sc><i>minus </i>&#x201C;Both Shakespeare . . . time.&#x201D;</hanging></cn> <cn> <sigla>1865<tab> </tab><sc> ...
560) Commentary Note for lines 2948-49:
2948-9 {God a mercy} <Gramercy> on his soule, | and of all {Christians} <Christian> soules, <I pray God.>

    ... hanging> <para>2948<tab> </tab><b>Christian Souls</b>] <sc>Roberts</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i>1877-9</i>, pp. 107-8): &lt;/p.107&gt; ...

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