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311 to 320 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields

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311) Commentary Note for line 719:
719 And duller shouldst thou be then the fat weede
    ... ross the river.  As <i>the fat weed</i> Shakespeare may have had in mind asphode ...
    ... image is one of torpor. <i>Dull</i>  in Shakespeare is often applied to sleep (c ...
    ... rgics, </i> 1: 78) is surely imaginary. Shakespeare need have had no particular  ...
    ... t clear which, if any, &#8216;fat weed' Shakespeare has in mind.  The asphodel,  ...
    ... [3756], appears to have been written by Shakespeare solely to provoke recollecti ...
312) Commentary Note for line 720:
720 That {rootes} <rots> it selfe in ease on Lethe wharffe,
    ... /sc> (ed. 1747), claims that &#x201C;<i>Shakespear</i>,  apparently thro' ignora ...
    ... ng wood, on the wood of the wharf where Shakespeare imagined Charon's boat to ar ...
    ... weeds on the Avon or Bankside had taken Shakespeare's eye. The reading &#8216;ro ...
    ... 2.213 (926)], appears to be peculiar to Shakespeare (<i>OED sb.</i>1 2c)."</para ...
313) Commentary Note for line 722:
722 {Tis} <It's> giuen out, that sleeping in {my} <mine> Orchard,
    ... ssary, <sc>Verity</sc> says, &#x201C;in Shakespeare commonly if not always = &#8 ...
    ...  &#x201C;Sexuality in the Reading of <i>Shakespeare</i>,' 95-6. &lt;/p. 109&gt;  ...
314) Commentary Note for line 725:
725 Ranckely abusde: but knowe thou noble Youth,
    ... ing the ear of a person are frequent in Shakespeare."</para></cn>  <cn> <sigla>1 ...
315) Commentary Note for line 729:
729 Ghost. I that incestuous, that adulterate beast, {D3}
    ... x201C; &#8216;<i>adulterate</i>  <small>Shakespear</small> uses for <i> adultero ...
    ...  <i>Hastings</i>,&#8212;]] I believe <i>Shakespeare </i>wrote. &#8216;<i>Th</i>' ...
    ... &gt; stricted to this single meaning in Shakespeare's day: we have plenty of evi ...
    ... rous (the invariable sense elsewhere in Shakespeare)."</para></cn>  <cn> <sigla> ...
    ... <para>729<tab> </tab><b>adulterate</b>] Shakespeare's First Folio Concordance Li ...
    ... mean 'corrupted' in a more general way; Shakespeare uses it in its literal sense ...
316) Commentary Note for line 733:
733 The will of my most seeming vertuous Queene;
    ... on'; see <i>Son.</i> 135 and 136, where Shakespeare puns on this meaning and his ...
317) Commentary Note for line 742:
742 Will {sort} <sate> it selfe in a celestiall bed
742 And pray on garbage.
    ... ate</i> <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "a Shakespearian coinage, explained by <i>O ...
318) Commentary Note for line 743:
743 But soft, me thinkes I sent the {morning} <Mornings> ayre,
    ... tab> <sc>Beckerman</sc> (1977, p. 312): Shakespeare artfully shapes "the action  ...
319) Commentary Note for line 746:
746 Vpon my secure houre, thy Vncle stole
    ... iced the resemblance which the ghost in Shakespeare bears to the ghost of Sich&# ...
320) Commentary Note for line 747:
747 With iuyce of cursed {Hebona} <Hebenon> in a viall,
    ...  Plant, and is certainly the Word which Shakespeare intended.&#x201D;</para></cn ...
    ... t, that it should, when administered as Shakespeare describes, produce the conse ...
    ... wo authors should coincide in using it. Shakespeare, it is true, has elsewhere t ...
    ... ara>[He distinguishes between Pliny and Shakespeare, and summarizes the argument ...
    ... sigla> <hanging>Reed:  claims Bacon  is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i>  ...
    ... : &#x201C;It is doubtful what precisely Shakespeare and his contemporaries meant ...
    ... uice of hebon' as a poison, but even if Shakespeare took it from there and not f ...
    ... Q1, F <i>Hebenon</i>  may represent the Shakespearean form. Yet Shakespearean te ...
    ... y represent the Shakespearean form. Yet Shakespearean texts have <i>Ebony (-ie)  ...
    ... ess: the unique form here suggests that Shakespeare may have thought the poison- ...
    ... i>Confess. Am., </i> 4: 3017), and that Shakespeare associated 'hebon' with henb ...
    ... ls show little correspondence with what Shakespeare here describes. Alternative  ...
    ... </i>  with any familiar plant. No doubt Shakespeare drew on what he had heard or ...
    ... non, Hebon, Hebona</i>.  Names given by Shakespeare and Marlowe to some substanc ...
    ... ce' (<i>OED</i>).  It seems likely that Shakespeare took the word from Marlowe,  ...
    ... sed Herb and Avens in the vernacular of Shakespeare's day&#x201D; or &#x201C;<i> ...
    ...  what is perhaps the most famous of all Shakespearian lines about ears. It appea ...
    ...  with hints of ye a &#8216;braver' one. Shakespeare condenses Lightbourne's last ...
    ... non, Hebon, Hebona</i>.  Names given by Shakespeare and Marlowe to some substanc ...
    ... ce' (<i>OED</i>).  It seems likely that Shakespeare took the word from Marlowe,  ...

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