351 to 360 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... > </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, rp ...
... > </tab><sc>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Education, Lecture 3, 18 ...
... intensive' (<i>OED</i>) always used by Shakespeare with nouns like knave, trait ...
... d. 1868): “Here, as elsewhere by Shakespeare, used in the sense which it ...
... n quotes six other uses of this term in Shakespeare, including [F1] 1648.</para> ...
... iliar oath with a prince of Denmark. As Shakespeare gave the living manners, cus ...
... int Patrick] <sc>anon.</sc> “The Shakespearian Ghost,” rev. of a ...
... ppears in Voragine. “In a word, Shakespeare could have gleaned most of t ...
... 587, 2: 28; D.P. Barton, <i>Ireland and Shakespeare,</i> 1919, pp. 30ff.” ...
... is line (present in all three texts) is Shakespeare's only reference to the sain ...
... sm [absence of religion] that underlies Shakespeare's thinking as to speak soon ...
... ar by my Sword': A Note in Johnson's <i>Shakespeare</i>.” <i>SQ</i> 27 (1 ...
... the Knights of the Bath in the time of Shakespeare ended thus:—‘In ...
... Danes it was a religious ceremony, but Shakespeare attended only to the manners ...
... truths of revealed religion,—and Shakespeare's consequent reverence in hi ...
... e ghost cry under the stage: “If Shakespeare did not expect (rightly or w ...
... at) has, in a manner characteristically Shakespearean, serious and even sinister ...
... age'), though the only other example of Shakespeare's use of the latter effect i ...
... ons show the fame and and reputation of Shakespeare, being popularly known lines ...
... True-penny' was used by authors besides Shakespeare, by Nash, for instance, in h ...
... eculiar appropriateness as here used by Shakespeare in reference to the ghost's ...
... ays: “I have always fancied that Shakespeare intended Hamlet to be, not m ...
... any writer before or contemporary with Shakespeare; and Johnson's and other dic ...
... sc> (<i>apud</i> anon. rev. “The Shakespearian Ghost,” <i>TLS</i> ...
... fellow – <small>not elsewhere in Shakespeare."</small></para></cn> <cn> ...
... in <i>OED</i>; <small>not elsewhere in Shakespeare. Could it have been a theat ...