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201 to 210 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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201) Commentary Note for line 468:
468 Hold it a fashion, and a toy in blood

    ... assion as opposed to reason, which explains a very frequent use of this word in Shakespeare (cf. 3.2.69, 4.4.58, 4.5.117). It is also associated with sensual ap ...
202) Commentary Note for line 469:
469 A Violet in the youth of primy nature,

    ... : </hanging> <para>469<tab></tab> primy] <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982): &#x201C;A Shakespearean coinage. In its prime or springtime, the period when youth is at i ...

    ... e] <sc>Edwards</sc> (ed. 1985): "the spring-time of life ('primy' seems to be a Shakespearean coinage)."</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1987<tab> </tab><sc>oxf4</sc></s ...

    ... ab> </tab><b>primy</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "This word appears to be a Shakespearian invention. Onions glosses it &#8216;that is in its prime'; Wilson ...

    ... ab> </tab> primy] <sc> Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;a Shakespearean coinage meaning 'in its prime' or perhaps 'spring-like'; see 'For ...
203) Commentary Note for line 470:
470 {Forward} <Froward>, not permanent, sweete, not lasting,

    ... rch&#225;nt, &amp;c. To pronounce it as a trochee, l&#225;sting, is against the Shakespearian usage of admitting a trochee only after a pause.&#x201D;</para></c ...

    ... /b>] <sc>Clarke</sc> &amp; <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): &#x201C;A word framed by Shakespeare to express succinctly that which is supplied.&#x201D;</para></cn> <c ...

    ... regular, Rowe read &#8216;tho' sweet,' Capell &#8216;sweet, but not.' <small>In Shakespeare a pause in verse often supplies the place of a syllable. </small>And ...

    ... rch&#225;nt, &amp;c. To pronounce it as a trochee, l&#225;sting, is against the Shakespearian usage of admitting a trochee only after a pause. But, <sc>Elze </s ...
204) Commentary Note for line 471:
471 The {perfume and} suppliance of a minute
471 No more.

    ... /b>] <sc>Clarke</sc> &amp; <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): &#x201C;A word framed by Shakespeare to express succinctly that which is supplied.&#x201D;</para></cn> <c ...

    ... >] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "perfume that serves as a momentary diversion. Shakespeare does not use <i>suppliance</i> elsewhere."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...

    ... 2006): &#x201C;'that which supplies the volatile sensory pleasure of a moment'. Shakespeare uses <i>perfume</i> to stand in for the fleeting pleasures of spring ...
205) Commentary Note for line 475:
475 In thewes and {bulkes,} <Bulke:> but as {this} <his> temple waxes

    ... n Spenser, Chaucer, and earlier writers; the former is found very rarely before Shakespeare's day. It occurs (as cited by <sc>Nares</sc>) in Turberville's <i>Ov ...

    ... g in 's' in this line, or from confusion about an attached comma in some hands; Shakespeare does not use 'bulks' elsewhere.&#x201D;</para> <br/> <hanging><sc>a ...
206) Commentary Note for line 478:
478 And now no soyle nor cautell doth besmirch

    ... ], &#8216;<i>Swear priests and cowards and men </i>cautelous.' But I believe <i>Shakespear </i>wrote, &#8216;<i>And now no soil </i><sc>of </sc><i>cautel</i> &# ...

    ... Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C; . . . The word is used only once elsewhere by Shakespeare,&#x201D; in <i>LC </i>303. </para></cn><cn><hanging><sc>cln1</sc> = ...

    ... autell</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "crafty intention, deceitful purpose. Shakespeare does not use <i>cautel</i> elsewhere; but he does employ the adjecti ...

    ... cautell] <sc>Thompson &amp; Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): &#x201C;craft or deceit. Shakespeare also uses the adjective, as in Brutus' reference to 'men cautelous' ...
207) Commentary Note for line 484:
484 The {safty} <sanctity> and health of {this whole} <the weole> state,

    ... > (1854, p. 159): &#x201C;I know not that <i>saf&#235;ty</i> occurs anywhere in Shakespeare, unless the reading of the 4to Hamlet of 1604 (test Malone, Var. Sha ...

    ... in Shakespeare, unless the reading of the 4to Hamlet of 1604 (test Malone, Var. Shakespeare, vol. vii, p. 216), [484] be correct, which seems not impossible. [ ...

    ... y' seems plainly a misprint for &#8216;sanity,' a word which was rarely used in Shakespeare's time, and of which his words afford only one other instance. The 4 ...

    ... bly few have ever doubted, that 'beguide' is a misreading of 'beguile' [597] in Shakespeare's own hand.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 48&gt;</para> <para> &lt;p. 44&gt; &#x20 ...

    ... ate passage was wanting in Q1, Q2 has to have it from manuscript copy, that is, Shakespeare's foul papers . . . .&#x201D; &lt;/p. 44&gt;</para> </cn> <cn> <sig ...

    ... not metre; for though the word is apparently trisyllabic in <i>FQ,</i> 5.4.46, Shakespeare affords no parallel and some 6o contrary instances. Other attempts t ...

    ... o physical than to mental health and a conjunction of synonyms is not unique in Shakespeare.&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1985<tab> </tab><sc>cam4</sc></s ...

    ... Spenser's <i>FQ</i> (5.4.46), but acknowledges that it is usually disyllabic in Shakespeare, as at [506]. Warburton's suggestion [see TNM] improves the metre.&# ...
208) Commentary Note for line 489:
489 As he in his {particuler act and place} <peculiar Sect and force>

    ... of such unusual length that one may ascribe it to the decreasing legibility of Shakespeare's MS. between the transcription which lies behind F and the printing ...
209) Commentary Note for line 493:
493 If with too credent eare you list his songs

    ... k &amp; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): &#x201C;believing credulous. <small>Not used by Shakespeare elsewhere in this sense. It means &#8216;credible' in [<i>WT</i> 1.2 ...

    ... dent</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "trustful. This rare word seems to be a Shakespearian coinage."</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1988<tab></tab><sc>bev2</sc> </ ...
210) Commentary Note for line 499:
499 “The chariest maide is prodigall inough

    ... 405): &#x201C;&#8216;Chariest' (5th S. vi. 345.)&#8212;Perhaps the meaning of Shakespeare will appear more clearly from the provincial use of this word. In th ...

    ... careful.' In meaning, therefore, it was the exact opposite of &#8216;prodigal.' Shakespeare, then, appears to mean that the maid who was most sparing in her add ...

    ... 6;chariest' equivalent to &#8216;<i>la plus ch&#233;rie</i>'? Compare, perhaps, Shakespeare's 22nd Sonnet: &#8212; &#8216;Bearing thy hert which I will keep so ...

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