The Shakespeare Cyclopædia And New Glossary ..

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Henry Percy. RII. ; IHIV. and 2HIV.
nose. It was not for nothing that my nose fell a-bleeding. Merch. II, 5, 24.
In Sh. time bleeding at the nose was considered ominous. In regard to LLL.
V, 2, 568, see Alexander.
note. A stigma ; a mark of reproach.
RII. I, 1, 43.
noted. D isgraced ; marked with a stigma.
Cses. IV, 3, 2.
not ever. Not ever is an uncommon ex- pression and does not mean 7iever, but not always. Mason. HVIII. V, 1, 130.
not=pated. Having the hair cut close.
IHIV. II, 4, 78. Accord
...ing to some, it means bull-headed ; stubborn. Nares calls attention to the fact that beardless wheat has been called 7iot wheat, cf.
Line 251 in same scene — knotty-pated.
Also Chaucer's description of the Yeo- man (" Canterbury Tales," Prol. line 109) : "A not-hed hadde he, with a broune visage." nourish. This word, as it occurs in IHVI.
I, 1, 50 : Our isle be made a nourish of salt tears, has occasioned some dis- cussion. The usual interpretation is that the isle would be made a nurse or nourisher of salt tears, and the singular expression in the preceding line : When at their mother'' s moist eyes babes shall suck, lends color to this view.


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