751 to 760 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... to pronounce, after reading this, that Shakespeare intended to represent Hamlet ...
... his prose text but without assertion of Shakespeare's use of it as a source. </f ...
... inds no support in the ultimate text of Shakespeare beyond 3 or 4 passages. One ...
... and boney, and big.' Part I.ch.viii. By Shakespeare it is made the name of a fam ...
... ting the above I have learned that this Shakespearean co-incidence did not occur ...
... I confess,' says Coleridge, ‘that Shakespeare has left the character of th ...
... Baldwin</sc> (1964, p. 242): “In Shakespeare, although she [Gertrude] pro ...
... slightly modifying, J.M. Nosworthy, <i>Shakespeare's Occasional Plays</i> (Lond ...
... knew the king's intention. Most likely, Shakespear, as </p.321><p.322&g ...
... n speaking to his ‘uncle-father.' Shakespeare, like the all-accomplished d ...
... er (Scene 4). It is quite possible that Shakespeare meant us to suppose that, wh ...
... onceive that it was a mere oversight on Shakespeare's part; for we must not forg ...
... . But the quotation given suggests what Shakespeare implies, that he ‘doub ...
... ready learned of the project—how, Shakespeare does not say, but it is easy ...
... d Guildenstern at 3.3.2-4 [2273-5], but Shakespeare often uses the convention wh ...
... <i>Act</i>, save a slight one, in which SHAKESPEARE is no ways concern'd, commit ...
... their removal is part of a revision by Shakespeare of the later part of the pla ...
... rds argues that this passage was cut by Shakespeare as part of a revision of the ...
... oversight on </p.57><p.58> Shakespeare's part, or whether we should ...
... der Endsylbe, ist Sh.'s Wort.” [Shakespeare's word is <i>énginer</i ...
... tineer</i> for ‘mutineer,' though Shakespeare has it both ways; and the wo ...
... the explosives buried in such tunnels). Shakespeare had drawn on Holinshed's des ...