741 to 750 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... l</i>,' &c.—Sidney Walker (<i>Shakespeare's Versification</i>, &c. ...
... p;c. vol. I. p. 308. (Walker, in his <i>Shakespeare's Versification</i>, &c. ...
... ak and tautological. I now suppose that Shakespeare wrote: ‘And either <i> ...
... luable illustrations of the writings of Shakespeare which have lately been produ ...
... ok which, not improbably, may have been Shakespeare's </p.126><p.127> ...
... vil,' was part of an old proverb, which Shakespeare quotes elsewhere. So in <i>1 ...
... wever, we can light upon a verb used by Shakespeare himself, albeit elsewhere, i ...
... ome authority, as it was printed during Shakespeare's life; and <i>master</i> gi ...
... m was <i>the</i> weakness of that older Shakespearian scholarship, to which our ...
... p;Q</i>, 3rd ser. <sc>X,</sc> 427-8; <i>Shakespeare: Some Notes</i>, pp.101-4), ...
... nement or restriction (e.g. Ingleby, <i>Shakespeare Hermeneutics</i>, pp. 123ff. ...
... ion is not the compositor's fault; that Shakespeare had not found the word he wa ...
... d the verb at this point, or, possibly, Shakespeare failed to supply one. Variou ...
... il' (Dent, T566) is used three times by Shakespeare in <i>1H4</i> (3.1.54, 55 an ...
... of thee forgiveness.' In both instances Shakespeare draws on the assumption that ...
... XI. <i>Heaven</i> used as plural. . . . Shakespeare—with a degree of freed ...
... ven</i> is . . . used in this manner by Shakespeare himself and by his contempor ...
... x201C;Heaven,” is accordant with Shakespeare's usage elsewhere. See Note ...
... #x201C;as a plural occurs frequently in Shakespeare, <i>e.g.</i> <i>R2</i> [1.2. ...
... with me;' which is more in the style of Shakespeare than the amendment, nor is a ...
... /sc>ed. 1877): “For instances of Shakespeare's use of <i>Heaven</i> as a ...
... or some counter-argument see Sisson, <i>Shakespeare's Tragic Justice</i>, pp. 10 ...
... here they are, as R.W. Dent argues (<i>Shakespeare Quarterly </i>29 [1978), pp. ...
... thoughtless but outrageous license with Shakespeare seems to have become invaria ...
... ine the original scene and the order of Shakespeare's language we find that this ...
... iggers into insensibility (elsewhere in Shakespeare, 'customer' means 'whore'), ...
... s further inquiry, as it is peculiar to Shakespeare. To <i>bloat</i> is to dry a ...
... teresting, in considering the fact that Shakespeare stands alone in the use of < ...
... m of endearment appears frequently with Shakespeare's contemporaries.]</para></c ...
... “a term of endearment common in Shakespeare's day; cp. <i>TN</i> [1.5.62 ...
... ood sweet mouse', etc. (<i>Memoirs</i>, Shakespeare Soc., pp. 25-6); <i>TN</i> [ ...
... sually between husband and wife, though Shakespeare's Rosaline uses it to addres ...
... and <i>reaking</i>) and signifies with Shakespear <i>sweaty</i> as <i>reechy </ ...
... /i> means smokey and sooty. In any case Shakespeare wanted to portray the <i>kis ...