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1101 to 1110 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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1101) Commentary Note for line 3630_363:
3630-1 {Cour.} <Osr.> The King sir, hath layd {sir,} that in a dozen passes be|tweene
    ... ose, a phrase sufficiently familiar, in Shakespeare's time, to all fencers: its  ...
    ... a dozen&#x201D; was a very vague one in Shakespeare's time, and that if the text ...
    ... e confusion to Osric, here ridiculed by Shakesepare as &#8216;unable to state in ...
    ... e trouble is the tersest thing he says. Shakespeare sometimes leaves plot detail ...
    ... ry hard to believe in as a rendering of Shakespeare's intent.</para> <para>&#x20 ...
    ... in the theatre, and may not have struck Shakespeare, that the two things are not ...
    ... 216;twelve for nine'. The odds are that Shakespeare himself was in a muddle abou ...
1102) Commentary Note for line 3649_365:
3649-50 Hora. This Lapwing runnes away with the shell on his | head.
3651-2 Ham. A did {so sir} <Complie> with his dugge before a | suckt it, thus {has} <had> he and 3651
    ... t whether any alteration be necessary.  Shakespeare seems to have used <i> compl ...
    ... owever, by no means, an unusual term in Shakespeare's time<small>.'</small>  REE ...
    ...  have been caught, or rather copied, by Shakespeare from thence. &#8216;Flatteri ...
    ... owever, by no means an unusual  term in Shakespeare's time.'</para> <para><small ...
    ...  have been caught, or rather copied, by Shakespeare from thence. &#8216;Flatteri ...
    ... owever, by no means an unusual  term in Shakespeare's time.'</para> <para><small ...
    ... 216;comply' is only used three times by Shakespeare&#8212;twice in &#8216;Hamlet ...
    ... i> compliment</i> <small>in the time of Shakespeare</small></para></cn> <cn> <si ...
1103) Commentary Note for line 3652_365:
3652-3 {many} <mine> more of the same {breede} <Beauy> | that I know the drossy age dotes on,
    ...  the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...
1104) Commentary Note for line 3653_365:
3653-4 only got the tune of | the time, and {out of an} <outward> habit of incounter, a
    ... lt;p. 18&gt;may appear to be scarcely a Shakespearian word, has in fact been use ...
    ... f address, behaviour. <i>Obs.</i>  1596 SHAKES. Tam. Shr. IV. v. 54 That with yo ...
1105) Commentary Note for line 3654_365:
3654-5 kind of {histy} | <yesty> colection, which carries them through and through
    ... d</i>.<i> Fond</i> , in the language of Shakespeare's age, signified <i> foolish ...
    ...  Husbandry</i> , p. 18. 76, and 77.  So Shakespeare mentions together the <i> fa ...
    ... enraged: which much better accords with Shakespear's high-charged description th ...
    ... <i>fanned </i>, if <i>to fan</i> is for Shakespeare's period <i>to separate as b ...
1106) Commentary Note for line 3656:
3656 the most {prophane and trennowed} <fond and winnowed> opinions, and doe but blowe 3656
    ... sc>Jennens</sc> (ed. 1773) : &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare</i>  seems to have written < ...
    ... in his Husbandry p. 18. 76 &amp; 77. so Shakespeare mentions together the fan an ...
    ... cur together in other writers, and that Shakespeare has &#8216;the <i>fan</i> an ...
    ... stead, the later, mature<i> fond</i> of Shakespeare.  With such gossipy and outw ...
    ... of the Euphuist or affected courtier of Shakespeare's time, who was a hair-split ...
    ... nd extravagant in expression. Therefore Shakespeare makes <i>Hamlet </i>describe ...
    ...  Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare</i> , p. 220, I maintained t ...
    ... e reading, although Mr. Grant White (<i>Shakespeare's Scholar </i> , &amp;c. p.  ...
    ...  so sind die blasen entzwei. Vgl. Grant Shakespeare's Scholar 421." &lt;/p. 258& ...
    ... re so often coupled in the writings of  Shakespeare's day, and &#8216;fond' [foo ...
    ... 1C;Mr. Grant White in his edition of <i>Shakespeare</i> prints &#8216;<i>fann'd  ...
    ... , instead, later, mature<i> fond</i> of Shakespeare.  With such gossipy and outw ...
    ... ed one, as is so frequently the case in Shakespeare. Osric, and others like him, ...
    ... &#8216;often coupled in the writings of Shakespeare's day,' and &#8216;that &#x2 ...
    ... ty collection, and a repetition of that Shakespearian expression, a &#8216;mould ...
    ... eighty grain of wisdom behind; and what Shakespeare clearly intends to convey, a ...
    ... o say it is too tamely tautological for Shakespeare. Moreover, both these tame t ...
    ... tor could trace out from the letters in Shakespeare's manuscript before his eyes ...
    ...  rate &#8216;trennowed' is easy enough. Shakespeare had a habit sometimes, if th ...
    ... g but a misprint of &#8216;wennowed', a Shakespearian spelling for &#8216;winnow ...
    ... n, viz. that, whatever word it was that Shakespeare wrote, it must have been one ...
    ... &#8216;profond', if written with one of Shakespeare's undersized &#8216;d's, wou ...
    ... eading of a word written by the hadn of Shakespeare himself; and it not only fol ...
    ... itor and also for the idiosyncrasies of Shakespeare's spelling and handwriting.  ...
    ... we owe it probably to Scribe P who knew Shakespeare's handwriting and spelling w ...
    ... l and may have been actually looking at Shakespeare's manuscript as he wrote. It ...
    ...  the error in Quarto is intelligible if Shakespeare wrote <i>pfound</i> or <i>pr ...
    ... rm of approbation. This is supported by Shakespearean usage in such phrases as & ...
    ... n of <i>fond </i>to <i>fanned.</i> That Shakespeare thought of winnowing as effe ...
    ... nd finds her &#8216;chaffless')). Among Shakespeare's contemporaries the synonym ...
    ... at either, postulated as the reading of Shakespeare's manuscript, requires us to ...
    ...  indeed in Markham ((see above)) and in Shakespeare's own <i>MND</i>  ((Q1 [3.2. ...
    ... endation for F's &#8216;fond'. Probably Shakespeare wrote &#8216;fand'. The Q2 c ...
1107) Commentary Note for line 3657_1_3:
3657+1 {Enter a Lord.} 3657+1
3657+2 {Lord. My Lord, his Maiestie commended him to you by young}
3657+3 {Ostricke, who brings backe to him that you attend him in the hall,}
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
1108) Commentary Note for line 3657_4_3:
3657+4 {he sends to know if your pleasure hold to play with Laertes, or that}
3657+5 {you will take longer time?} 3657+5
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
1109) Commentary Note for line 3657_6_3:
3657+6 {Ham. I am constant to my purposes, they followe the Kings plea-}
3657+7 {sure, if his fitnes speakes, mine is ready: now or whensoeuer, pro-}
3657+8 {uided I be so able as now.}
    ... with which the latter had been charged. Shakespeare probably introduced this lor ...
    ... nse of the word seems to be confined to Shakespeare.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
1110) Commentary Note for line 3660_366:
3660-1 in continuall practise, I shall winne at the | ods; <but> thou would'st not 3660-1
3661-2 thinke how {ill all's} <all> heere a|bout my hart, but it is no matter.
    ... tlemanly manners with osr., and his and Shakespeare's own fondness for presentim ...

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