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21 to 30 of 227 Entries from All Files for "john " in All Fields

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21) Commentary Note for line 274:
274 To doe obsequious sorrowe, but to perseuer

    ... a>1765<tab> </tab><sc>john1 </sc><i>3H6</i> 2.5.118 (1256)</sigla><hanging><sc>john 1 </sc><i>3H6 </i> &#8776; <i>Ham. </i>+ in magenta</hanging><para>274<tab> ...
22) Commentary Note for line 275:
275 In obstinate condolement, is a course

    ... 006): &#x201C;grieving. <i>OED</i> cites this and a line in the final speech of John Marston's <i>Antonio's Revenge</i> (5.3.174) as the earliest uses of this w ...
23) Commentary Note for line 292:
292 And with no lesse nobilitie of loue

    ... <i>&#x201C;Nobility</i> is rather <i>generosity.</i>&#x201D;</para> <bwk><para>JOHN disagrees with WARB. no HEATH, as usual.</para></bwk></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773 ...
24) Commentary Note for line 294:
294 Doe I impart {toward you for} <towards you. For> your intent

    ... </tab><sc>cln1</sc> </sigla><hanging><sc>cln1</sc>: <sc>theo; </sc>Badham; <sc>john +</sc></hanging><para>294<tab> </tab><b>impart</b>] <sc>Clark &amp; Wright< ...
25) Commentary Note for line 313:
313 Ham. O that this too too {sallied} <solid> flesh would melt, {but Hamlet}

    ... ent if once all were set at liberty.'&#8212;<sc>A Treatise of Commerce</sc>, by John Wheeler, p. 157.</para> <para>&#8216;Contrariwise, Seneca was forbidden by ...
26) Commentary Note for line 316:
316 His cannon gainst {seale} <Selfe->slaughter, ô God, <O> God,

    ... > The only 4to Theobald owns at this time is Q10. Also, he thinks that the poet John Hughes is responsible for 1723 (our <sc>wilk2</sc>), a copy of 1718 (our <s ...

    ... te:</b> Kuist identifies <sc>As you like it</sc> as either Thomas Holt White or John Loveday. </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1791-<tab> </tab><sc>rann</sc></sigla><han ...

    ... ine law. Noting Pope's spelling 'cannon' here, and the correction to 'canon' in John Hughes's text of 1723, Theobald comments that Shakespeare 'intended the <i> ...
27) Commentary Note for line 319:
319 Fie on't, {ah fie,} <Oh fie, fie,> tis an vnweeded garden

    ... 4-5] </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1925<tab> </tab>Farjeon</sigla><hanging>Farjeon: John Barrymore</hanging><para>319<tab> </tab><b>Fie on't</b>] <sc>Farjeon</sc> ( ...
28) Commentary Note for line 325:
325 That he might not {beteeme} <beteene> the winds of heauen

    ... old reading to be the true one. The rejected word occurs in a <i>Letter of Sir John Paston to his Brother</i>, though, as I conceive, not rightly explained by ...

    ... To <i>beteene</i>, in Shakspere, signifiies <i>admit: </i>&#8212;as used by Sir John Paston, <i>to impart</i>. <sc>Henley.&#x201D;</sc></para> <para><b>Ed. note ...

    ... #x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1822<tab> </tab>Nares</sigla><hanging>Nares: <sc>john </sc>without attribution analogue Spenser; <sc>Boswell </sc>without attribu ...

    ... meaning from the use in Golding's Ovid, (1587,) compared with the Latin. <small>John Kemble soon after familiarized the general ear to its use. He deserves well ...
29) Commentary Note for line 334:
334 O {God,} <Heauen!> a beast that wants discourse of reason

    ... o madly hot that no <i>discourse of reason</i>&#8212;Can gratify the same.' Sir John Davys in the preface to his Reports: &#8216;And this idea have I conceived ...

    ... om one thought to another:&#8212;&#8216;the <i>discoursing</i> thought,' as Sir John Davies expresses it.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1843<tab> </tab><sc>k ...
30) Commentary Note for line 341:
341 With such dexteritie to incestious sheets,

    ... ueen Elizabeth), thereby precipitating the English Reformation (Shakespeare and John Fletcher were later to dramatize this event in <i>Henry VIII</i>). Interest ...

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