871 to 880 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... t this world and about the one to come. Shakespeare uses <i>both the worlds</i> ...
... not parental love. <small>But Rushton, Shakespeare's Euphuism, p. 9, quotes fro ...
... ], and King <i>Lr</i>. [3.4.76 (1857)], Shakespeare uses the same illustration, ...
... <fnc> Here Symons takes a rare swipe at Shakespeare's German editors/commentator ...
... d III</i>, iii, 110-113 (ed. Brooke, <i>Shakespeare Apocrypha</i>, p. 90): ̵ ...
... >Andrews</sc> (ed. 1993): “Feed. Shakespeare's wording in this passage re ...
... s the <i>Err</i>. [4.4.27 (1308)] where Shakespeare says, <i>You are sensible in ...
... taking aim in shooting, an image which Shakespeare is fond of and employs in th ...
... 216;leuell' may mean plain or open with Shakespeare </2:275><2:276> ...
... Laertes. Had the shooting image been in Shakespeare's mind, he would assuredly h ...
... '. ‘pierce' is a strong and more Shakespearean word, often used for commu ...
... as daylight strikes the eye.' I assume Shakespeare wrote ‘pearce', and th ...
... r (F's 'pierce' seems to Ewards a 'more Shakespearean word').”</para></cn ...
... ad I never seen any other Edition of <i>SHAKESPEARE</i> than Mr. <i>POPE</i>'s, ...
... as passed thro' all the Editions of <sc>Shakespeare</sc>; and, as I suppose, was ...
... less tolerable from such a Genius as <i>Shakespeare's</i>, and especially in the ...
... its elucidation that we recognize here Shakespeare's use of ‘and'=yet; as ...
... is is unquestionably corrupt. I suppose Shakespear wrote, ‘<i>Nature is </ ...
... ure's falling in love, is exactly in <i>Shakespear</i>'s manner, and is a though ...
... 5-1760), Critical Notes on the Plays of Shakespeare. </fnc></para></cn> <cn> <si ...
... . Quoted in the Transactions of the New Shakespere Society, 1877-9, Part III, 46 ...
... port other evidence which shows that in Shakespeare's time the English were a ve ...
... </i>is “Ballads that illustrate Shakespeare.” The standard author ...
... (1894 ed.)</para> <para>“Of all Shakespeare's own songs – such as ...
... s occur, they are unlikely to have been Shakespeare's invention. Cf. Chaucer, <i ...