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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... mporary alienation of mind, a fit. So, in <i>Eliosto Libidinosa</i>, a novel by John Hinde, 1606: ‘—that bursting out of an <i>ecstasy</i> wherein s ...
... para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1934<sc><tab> </tab>cam3</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cam3 = john </sc>for <b>curbe and wooe</b></hanging></cn> <cn> <sigla>1942<tab> </tab>< ...
... </tab><sc>dtn</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>dtn = cln1, </sc>Davies<sc> </sc>(in<sc> john </sc>for conj. emend. “devilish for devil) w/o attrib. + magenta und ...
134) Commentary Note for line 2569:2569 Vnpeg the basket on the houses top,... referring to the story of the jackanapes and the partridges, in a letter of Sir John Suckling, is by no means satisfactory. The author seems rather to allude to ...
... ab><b>famous Ape</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): “<sc>Warner</sc>: Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, may possibly allude to the same story.  ...
... at has not come down to us; perhaps, as Warner suggests, also alluded to by Sir John Suckling in one of his letters: ‘It is the story of the jackanapes an ...
... e</sc> (ed. 1903): “An allusion to some popular fable not now known. Sir John Suckling seems to refer to the same in one of his letters: ‘It is the ...
... b> </tab><sc>Warner</sc> (<i>apud</i> <sc>Steevens</sc>, ed. 1773): “Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, may possibly allude to the same story.  ...
... & Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868, rpt. 1878): “It has been supposed that Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, alludes to the same story that is here ref ...
... b>the famous Ape</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): “<sc>Warner</sc>: Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, may possibly allude to the same story.  ...
... has not yet been identified. Warner (Var. Sh. vol. vii. p. 405) thinks that Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, may possibly allude to the same story:  ...
... tab><b>the famous Ape</b>] <sc>Craig</sc> (ed. 1931): “A letter from Sir John Suckling seems to supply other details of the story, otherwise not identifi ...
136) Commentary Note for line 2571:2571 To try conclusions in the basket creepe,... ons</i> is to put to proof, or to try experiments. See <i>MV</i> 2.2 [601]. Sir John Suckling possibly alludes to the same story in one of his letters.—&# ...
... ut to proof, or try experiments. See <i>Ant</i>, [5.2.355 (3625)], note 33. Sir John Suckling possibly alludes to the same story in one of his letters: ‘I ...
... he passage alludes, apparently, to some fable or story now quite forgotten. Sir John Suckling, in one of his letters, refers to ‘the story of the jackanap ...
... i>in</i> <sc>Collier</sc>, ed. 1843): [In ink, pasted in] “Enginer | Sir John Dersham in his Poem “To the King” State Poems I. 33) has Engi ...
... pedient is adopted for the same purpose. Among them the notable instance of Sir John Falstaff carrying off the body of Harry Percy on his back, an exploit as cl ...
139) Commentary Note for line 2612:2612 Ore whom, his very madnes like some ore... cn> <cn> <sigla>1982<tab> </tab><sc>ard2</sc></sigla> <hanging><sc>ard2 ≈ john </sc><i>conj</i>. without attribution</hanging><para><sc>2612<tab> </tab></ ...
140) Commentary Note for lines 2656-57:2657 body. The King is a thing{.} <—>... </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> </tab><sc>jen</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>jen = john +</sc></hanging> <para>2656-7<tab> </tab><b>The body is </b>. . .<b> the bo ...
... nd Kittredge) dismissed as a consciously <i>antic</i> pose (and e.g. omitted by John Gielgud as Hamlet). Wilson (partly after Eschenburg and Caldecott) paraphra ...
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