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Definition 2024


mortal_coil

mortal coil

English

Noun

mortal coil (plural mortal coils)

  1. The chaos and confusion of life.
  2. The physical body of man (containing the spirit inside).
    • 1871, “T. A.”, “Polyxenes”, in J. E. Taylor et al. (editors), Hardwicke’s Science-Gossip for 1872, Robert Hardwicke (1873), page 32:
      [] [A black swallowtail] does not—as a true insect does—change from worm to grub, and from grub to his mature form, but simply “shuffles off his mortal coil,”—skin, hairs, and leggings all complete, now and then, [] . He then leaves his shuffled-off “mortal coil” hanging upon a fragment of dirty cobweb, as before described.
    • 1874, C. M. Ingleby, The Still Lion: An Essay Towards the Restoration of Shakespeare’s Text, Trübner & Co., page 87:
      Shakespeare represents the human body under various figures: a coil: a case: a frame: a machine: a vesture: a heft: a motion or puppet: &c. It has been contended that in Hamlet’s speech, the ‘mortal coil’ is the coil, i.e. trouble of turmoil, incident to man’s mortal state: but the analogies are too strong in favor of the ‘mortal coil’ being what Fletcher calls the ‘case of flesh’ (Bonduca, iv. 1).
    • 1918, Roy Chapman Andrews and Yvette Borup Andrews, Camps and Trails in China: A Narrative of Exploration, Adventure, and Sport in Little-Known China, D. Appleton and Company, page 151:
      His soul may have found rest, but “his mortal coil” certainly did not. Unfortunately [] the village “astrologer” informed them that [] they must dig him up, give the customary feast in his honor and have another burial site chosen.
    • 2003, R. A. Salvatore, Immortalis, Random House, Inc. (2004), ISBN 978-0-345-44123-2, page 114:
      She escaped her mortal coil and moved out, looking back at herself as she stood motionless, clutching the stone that had become the link between her body and her spirit.

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