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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... ituted. It may, very analogically, mean <i>bargain</i> or covenant between two. Shakespeare also uses <i>mart,</i> for to traffic. [quotes 110].</para> <para>&# ...
... ant</i>, does not fall in with the rhythm of the line. I have little doubt that Shakespeare wrote <i>compáct</i>, which he had employed a few lines above i ...
... hat Mr. Hunter supports the same emendation, in his ‘New Illustrations of Shakespeare.' * </p. 2></para> <para><n2> <p. 2> “ * V ...
... </b><sc>Clarke</sc> & <sc>Clarke</sc> (ed. 1868): “A word formed by Shakespeare to express ‘joint bargain,' ‘mutual compact.' <small>We ...
... omart</b>] <sc>Clark & Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “ . . . which perhaps Shakespeare wrote, coining the word, and afterward corrected.”</para></cn ...
... <i>cov'nant </i>instead of <i>co-mart</i>, which is the reading of the quartos. Shakespeare elsewhere uses to <i>mart </i>for to <i>trade </i>or to <i>bargain</ ...
... 164, 3169, 3264, 3421. “A study of these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespeare's diction and in the kind of degradation his verse suffered at the h ...
52) Commentary Note for line 111:111 And carriage of the article desseigne,... ant</i>, does not fall in with the rhythm of the line. I have little doubt that Shakespeare wrote <i>compáct</i>, which he had employed a few lines above i ...
... hat Mr. Hunter supports the same emendation, in his ‘New Illustrations of Shakespeare.' * </para> <para><n2> <p. 2> “*Vol. ii. p. 234.& ...
... the eight others he lists in this category to “difficult handwriting in Shakespeare's own manuscript [. . . ].” </p. 298> <p. 305> He ...
53) Commentary Note for line 113:113 Of vnimprooued mettle, hot and full,... to impeach, to blame, to reprove) A word perpetually used by the authors about Shakespeare's time, and especially in religious controversy. . . . </p. 165&g ...
... ;‘Of <i>unimproved</i> mettle hot and full'—ought not to have given Shakespeare's commentators any trouble: for <i>unimproved</i> means <i>unimpeach ...
... , in the same meaning: and that it was perpetually so used by the authors about Shakespeare's time, and especially in theological controversy.' ‘For ye fo ...
... , in the same meaning: and that it was perpetually so used by the authors about Shakespeare's time, and especially in theological controversy.' ‘For ye fo ...
... erous instances of <i>improve</i> in this sense may be found in the writings of Shakespeare's time.”</para> <para><b>Ed. note:</b> Hudson note continues ...
... erous instances of <i>improve</i> in this sense may be found in the writings of Shakespeare's time.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1875<tab> </tab>Schmidt</sig ...
... ging><para>113<tab> </tab><b>mettle</b>] <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1881): “in Shakespeare, is <i>spirit, </i><small><i>temper, disposition</i>.</small>” ...
... e assumption may be that Fortinbras is eager to <i>prove</i> his <i>mettle</i>. Shakespeare does not use <i>unimproved</i> elsewhere and <i>OED</i> lists this a ...
54) Commentary Note for line 114:114 Hath in the skirts of Norway heere and there... for any employment; used much in the way we speak of the ‘purlieus.' and Shakespeare of the ‘suburbs,' of a city, where the refuse of society is ga ...
... Ed. note:</b> See Kliman, Bernice W. “Cum Notis Variorum: Samuel Henley, Shakespeare Commentator in Bell's <i>Annotations</i>.” <i>Shakespeare New ...
... Samuel Henley, Shakespeare Commentator in Bell's <i>Annotations</i>.” <i>Shakespeare Newsletter </i>48. 4 (Winter 1998/1999): 91-2; 108, 110.</para></cn> ...
... ht, </i>in this sense, is now accounted a vulgarism. It certainly was not so in Shakespeare's time, and Hunter is perhaps right when he prefers the reading of Q ...
... ed. 1934): <p .xxxvi> “Here, as often, the clue to the picture in Shakespeare's mind is to be found in other plays. The ingredients of the witches ...
... h bear the same meaning, show us that voracious and promiscuous feeding was for Shakespeare the distinctive feature of the shark tribe. The phrase ‘sharke ...
56) Commentary Note for line 116:116 For foode and diet to some enterprise... (ed. 1913) says that <i>stomach </i>meaning <i>courage</i> “is common in Shakespeare, but the words <i>food and diet</i> suggest that some play on the ot ...
57) Commentary Note for line 117:117 That hath a stomacke in't, which is no other... 3:8-9): <p. 8> “<i>Stomach</i>, says Dr. Johnson, in the times of Shakespeare, was used for <i>constancy</i> and <i>resolution</i>. The original, ...
... sc>Clark & Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “Neither word occurs elsewhere in Shakespeare. He uses however ‘compulsive' in this play, [2461].”</p ...
... are recorded by <i>OED</i> as first uses of now obsolete forms of 'compulsory'; Shakespeare does not use the common modern form.”</para> </cn> <tlnrange ...
59) Commentary Note for line 123:123 The source of this our watch, and the chiefe head... ] <sc>Bailey</sc> (1866, 2:334-5): <p. 334>“<i>Source</i>, even in Shakespeare's time, had acquired </p. 334><p. 335> this literal acce ...
60) Commentary Note for line 124:124 Of this post hast and Romadge in the land.... s probably derived, as Nares says, from ‘room,' ‘roomage.' Possibly Shakespeare had also ‘roam' in his mind, when he added the word to ‘ ...
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