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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... d dignified pursuits of sober years are to their elders.' Cf. [4.5.172 (2925)]. Shakespeare is fond of metaphors from clothes.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1 ...
... importing <i>graveness</i>. The construction is a very common one, not only in Shakespeare but in later writers, notably Mr. Swinburne.”</para></cn> <cn ...
... /i> <sc>Irving & Marshall</sc>, ed. 1890): “Ff. misprint <i>ran</i>. Shakespeare used the word <i>can</i> in a few places in its absolute sense of po ...
... assed, as in [<i>Mac.</i> 4.3.57 (1879)]: ‘to <i>top</i> Macbeth.'<small> Shakespeare seems to have been fond of metaphors derived from <i>top</i>, which ...
575) Commentary Note for line 3100:3100 Did Hamlet so enuenom with his enuy,... 1881): “‘With envy <i>of you</i>.' The objective, as it is called. Shakespeare often has both the objective and the subjective genitive in cases wh ...
... , &c. Or possibly we should read <i>by-gone</i>, a Scotch word, but used by Shakespeare in [<i>WT</i> a.s.? (0000)], where Hermione says, ‘Tell him, y ...
... emendation ((e.g. <i>begone, begnawn</i>)), have come from the assumption that Shakespeare alludes to the fading of love with the passage of time. But although ...
577) Commentary Note for line 3112_1_3:3112+1-3112+10 There liues . . . of th 'vlcer,... lly, and so illuminating of Claudius's philosophy of life. We cannot think that Shakespeare would delete it unless he were under considerable pressure to shorte ...
... ably from an erroneous idea that the word was derived from <i>plus, pluris</i>. Shakespeare does not employ it elsewhere, but it is not uncommon in writers cont ...
... y</sc> (ed. 1873): “The Cambridge editors shew that other writers beside Shakespeare imagine that ‘pleurisy' is connected with ‘plus;' using ...
... as of that of Hamlet. How is it possible, reading these lines, to believe that Shakespeare intended to give to the portrait of Hamlet any touch of energy!</han ...
... a>“I feel induced here to repeat what I remarked in reviewing (in the <i>Shakespeare Jahrbuch</i>) <i>Mr. Halliwell Phillipps' Memoranda on the Tragedy o ...
... as of that of Hamlet. How is it possible, reading these lines, to believe that Shakespeare intended to give to the portrait of Hamlet any touch of energy!</par ...
... a>“I feel induced here to repeat what I remarked in reviewing (in the <i>Shakespeare Jahrbuch</i>) <i>Mr. Halliwell Phillipps' Memoranda on the Tragedy o ...
... as of that of Hamlet. How is it possible, reading these lines, to believe that Shakespeare intended to give to the portrait of Hamlet any touch of energy!</par ...
... a>“I feel induced here to repeat what I remarked in reviewing (in the <i>Shakespeare Jahrbuch</i>) <i>Mr. Halliwell Phillipps' Memoranda on the Tragedy o ...
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