The book The Shakespeare Cyclopædia And New Glossary .. was written by author Phin, John, 1830-1913. [from Old Catalog] Here you can read free online of The Shakespeare Cyclopædia And New Glossary .. book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is The Shakespeare Cyclopædia And New Glossary .. a good or bad book?
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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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