771 to 780 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... sea, hasty as fire</i>.” [One of Shakespeare's favorite images. Cf.<i>R2< ...
... paraphrase] F1 departs not merely from Shakespeare's words but from his metre a ...
... und in fact. It does not occur again in Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... >The verb is two or three times used by Shakespeare in the similar sense of freq ...
... , p.391): “Johnson suspects that Shakespeare mistook <i>ore</i> for <i>or ...
... usage of <i>ore</i> may be peculiar to Shakespeare, but <i>mineral</i> in the s ...
... midt gives no meaning for <i>ore</i> in Shakespeare except ‘a vein of gold ...
... C;deposit or vein of [precious] metal. 'Shakespeare seems to think <i>ore</i> to ...
... b. 3); not elsewhere, in this sense, in Shakespeare. Joseph Hall writes of ̵ ...
... “. . . let us look again at the Shakespearian blank: 'As level as the ca ...
... minates in images depending on the true Shakespearian blank. "The blank passag ...
... the sense in which it is often used by Shakespeare, would suit the passage as w ...
... yet seems to bear the very Stamp of <i>SHAKESPEARE</i> upon it. The Coin, inde ...
... suppose it the very Sentiment of our <i>SHAKESPEARE</i>. The Poet, I remember, ...
... r he is! I produc'd these Verses in my SHAKESPEARE <i>restor'd</i>, from a <i>Q ...
... The Verses carry the very Stamp of <i>Shakespeare</i> upon them. The Coin, ind ...
... r he is! I produc'd these Verses in my SHAKESPEARE <i>restor'd</i>, from a <i>Q ...
... . The Verses carry the very Stamp of <i>Shakespeare</i> upon them. The Coin, ind ...
... 12;will readily occur to any student of Shakespeare, as favouring the insertion< ...
... o viperous</i> slander.” – Shakespeare again expatiates on the diff ...
... pted the text of the Quartos. In his <i>Shakespeare Restored</i>, p. 108, he had ...
... the sense in which it is often used by Shakespeare, would suit the passage as w ...
... ze followed him. I believe though, that Shakespeare wrote, as I have taken it in ...
... The Cambridge editions suggest that the Shakespearean word could just as well ha ...
... behind both texts, in other words that Shakespeare himself left it out, which w ...
... uspicion. Though we can never know what Shakespeare wrote here, envious slander ...
... wrote here, envious slander is at least Shakespearean. He often personifies slan ...
... their cause and it is a favourite with Shakespeare to describe malicious tongue ...
... o viperous</i> slander.” – Shakespeare again expatiates on the diff ...
... rhaps, but it seems equally likely that Shakespeare deliberately inserted a shor ...