611 to 620 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... nck</sc> (ed. 1847): “Actors, in Shakespeare's time, had not salaries, as ...
... the company, on twenty shares; of which Shakespeare owned four, while some other ...
... “<sc>Malone</sc>: The actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
... aluable <i>Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare</i>, <sc>1874, </sc>pp. 86-< ...
... ce, and although in date they are after Shakespeare's day, they nevertheless thr ...
... ' &c. Shankes, who had been one of Shakespeare's fellow-actors, makes an ap ...
... as they term it, and their answer is a Shakespearian discovery so recent and so ...
... ng not only in its familiar allusion to Shakespeare as a ‘deserveing man,' ...
... cal property a joint-stock affair. Thus Shakespeare himself was a stockholder in ...
... shall, ed. 1890): “The actors in Shakespeare's time had <i>shares</i> in ...
... -Phillips' Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare, 1874, pp. 86-91, the substa ...
... ed. 1891): “‘the actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
... his customary mild humour (see 28). In Shakespeare's time each regular member o ...
... d to a whole share.—The actors in Shakespeare's time had not annual salari ...
... with Submission, in this Passage of <i>SHAKESPEARE</i>, there is not the least ...
... h Submission, in this Passage of our <i>Shakespeare</i>, there is not the least ...
... h Submission, in this Passage of our <i>Shakespeare</i>, there is not the least ...
... conjectures <i>peacock</i>, and that <i>Shakespeare</i> alludes to a fable of th ...
... nnot help thinking, with Mr. Pope, that Shakespeare alluded to the well-known fa ...
... k</i>; the folio, 1623, <i>paiocke</i>. Shakespeare, I suppose, means, that the ...
... e in another place, seemed to figure in Shakespear's imagination as something ab ...
... , Peacock, &c. &c.' Assume that Shakespear made Hamlet talk like a Dane ...
... erm of abuse or dislike. It was rife in Shakespear's time: and I believe it may ...
... a> <para>“Of course, if I were a Shakespearean commentator I should sugge ...
... eading—not because I thought that Shakespear wrote it (for the preliminary ...
... e following is a well-know extract from Shakespear—[quotes 3.2.281-4 (2153 ...
... passages.</para> <para>“Whether Shakespear had means of knowing that it ...
... abeth's time, which seemed to figure in Shakespeare's imagination as something a ...
... nth century. <sc>Anonymous</sc> (<i>New Shakespearian Interpretations</i>, Edin. ...
... st popular manual of natural history in Shakespeare's day gives the following ac ...
... 72, shows that in the popular belief of Shakespeare's time the peacock had a ver ...
... apud Furness. Prof. Baynes, in his New Shakespearian Interpretations in The Edi ...
... <i>pa-jock</i> (<i>paiock</i>), and how Shakespeare could have become acquainted ...
... a misprint, and be drawn, as so many of Shakespeare's misunderstood words were, ...
... #x201C;‘In the natural history of Shakespeare's time,' says the writer of ...
... ys the writer of the article ‘New Shakespeare Interpretations' (<i>Ed, Rev ...
... ntribution, though one may wonder where Shakespeare got his knowledge of these n ...
... 872 says that in the natural history of Shakespeare's time the bird was the accr ...
... . All that happened, I believe, is that Shakespeare spelt ‘peacock' withou ...
... elty and lust in the natural history of Shakespeare's day, and perhaps the poet ...
... ea-jock</i> cited by Dyce does not make Shakespeare's use of it very likely. Mor ...
... ubitable instances of its occurrence in Shakespeare texts. Among many other sugg ...
... “There seems to be no doubt that Shakespeare wrote ‘paiock' and it ...
... for the concrete sum, as frequently in Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... (Natural History, cent. ii § 161). Shakespeare uses the word again in <i>MN ...
... es Hamlet call for the recorders? True, Shakespeare knew that recorders would be ...
... d had not rhymed' (A. Clutton-Brock, <i>Shakespeare's Hamlet</i>, 1922, p. 17).& ...
... isordered in body; both senses occur in Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... insult to the King is confirmed, see <i>Shakespearean Tragedy</i> (London; 1904, ...
619) Commentary Note for lines 2175-78: 2175-6 Ham. Your wisedome should shewe it selfe more
{richer} <ri-|cher> to signifie
2176-7 this to {the} <his> Doctor, for, for mee to put him | to his purgation, would
2177-8 perhaps plunge him into <farre> | more choller.
... “much more rich or resourceful. Shakespeare and his contemporaries often ...
620) Commentary Note for lines 2185-89: 2185-6 Guyl. Nay good my Lord, this curtesie is not of
| the right breede, if
2185
2186-7 it shall please you to make me a {wholsome} <whol-| some> aunswere, I will doe your
2187-8 mothers commaundement, | if not, your pardon and my returne, shall
2188-9 be the end of | <my> busines.
... “Courtesy. But here as elsewhere Shakespeare plays on <i>cur</i> (see <i> ...