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111 to 120 of 227 Entries from All Files for "john " in All Fields

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111) Commentary Note for lines 2146-50:
2146-7 {Thus} <So> runnes the world away. | Would not this sir & a forrest of fea-
2147-8 thers, if the rest of | my fortunes turne Turk with me, with <two> prouinciall
2149-50 Roses on my {raz'd} <rac'd> shooes, get me a fellowship in a cry | of players? <sir.>

    ... more than to change condition fantastically.&#x201D;</para> <hanging><sc>ays1 = john </sc><i>minus</i> &#x201C;So in . . . shoon.<sc>'&#x201D;</sc></hanging> <p ...

    ... yet a red and a white provincial rose are also recognized (in a list of 1634 by John Tradescant, printed in Gunther, <i>Early English Botanists</i>, p. 341; cf. ...
112) Commentary Note for line 2151:
2151 Hora. Halfe a share. 2151

    ... f desert and otherwise, vizt., Mr. Shankes, one part of his three,' &amp;c. Mr John Shankes not unnaturally remonstrated, and it is from his answer that we lea ...

    ... Winifred his brothers wife, and William his sonne' submit any more quietly than John Shankes to be &#8216;trampled upon,' as they term it, and their answer is a ...
113) Commentary Note for line 2156:
2156 A very very paiock. 2156

    ... <i>pea-jock</i> is not contained in Jamieson's Scottish Dictionary, abridged by John Johnston, and that, as far as my knowledge goes, there is no second passage ...
114) Commentary Note for line 2166:
2166 Why then belike he likes it not perdy.

    ... d&#233; a twelve-moneth will be soone gone. <b>1548</b> UDALL, etc. Erasm. Par. John xix. 115 A place perdye detestable. <i><b><i>c</i></b></i><b> 1550</b> BALE ...
115) Commentary Note for line 2167+1:
2167+1 {Enter Rosencraus and Guyldensterne.}

    ... 2</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard2: </sc><i>contra</i><sc> </sc>Wilson; contra<sc> john </sc></hanging><para>2167+1<tab> </tab><sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C ...
116) Commentary Note for line 2212+1:
2212+1 {Enter the Players with Recorders.}

    ... et</i>, but some have contended that it was a <i>flute</i>&#8212;a position Sir John Hawkins controverted in his &#8216;History of Music,' Vol. iv. p. 479.&#x20 ...
117) Commentary Note for lines 2213-18:
2213-4 Ham. I {sir}, but while the grasse growes, the prouerbe is | something
2214-16 musty, | <Enter one with a Recorder.> | ô the {Recorders,} <Recorder.> let mee see {one}, to withdraw with you, why
2217-8 doe you goe about to recouer the wind of mee, as if you | would driue
2218 me into a toyle?

    ... et</i>, but some have contended that it was a <i>flute</i>&#8212;a position Sir John Hawkins controverted in his &#8216;History of Music,' Vol. iv. p. 479.&#x20 ...
118) Commentary Note for lines 2255-56:
2255-6 They foole me to the top of my bent, | I will come by & by, 2255

    ... n> <cn> <sigla>1819<tab> </tab><sc>cald1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cald1 &#8776; john + </sc>magenta underlined</hanging> <para>2255<tab> </tab><b>bent</b>] C<sc ...
119) Commentary Note for line 2262:
2262 And doe such <bitter> busines as the {bitter} day

    ... Magazine</i> for Feb. 1845, p. 125.</para> <para>&#x201C;(I well remember that John Kemble&#8212;whose performance of the Prince of Denmark is among the most v ...

    ... 1845</sc>, p. <sc>125</sc>. &#8216;I may add, too,' continues Dyce, &#8216;that John Kemble,&#8212;whose performance of the Prince of Denmark is among the most ...
120) Commentary Note for line 2306:
2306 Tis meete that some more audience then a mother,

    ... n </i>(<i>The Self-Tormentor</i>) in <i>Terence: with an English translation by John Sargeant</i>. 2 vols. Loeb Classical Library. London: Heinemann and New Yor ...

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