881 to 890 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
881) Commentary Note for lines 2923-25: 2923 Oph. You must sing
{a downe} <downe> a downe,
2923-4 And you call | him a downe a. O how the wheele becomes it,
2924-5 It is | the false Steward that stole his Maisters daughter.
... r book, published before the time of <i>Shakespeare</i>. ‘The song was acc ...
... eevens</sc> (ed. 1778): “Perhaps Shakespeare alludes to <i>Phœbe's S ...
... cites from memory a quarto M.S. before Shakespeare's time. ‘The song was ...
... f a song. <i>Steevens </i>thinks, that Shakespeare alludes to <i>Phoebe's Sonne ...
... 1D; [O how well the wheel fits it! That Shakespeare knew the wheel as an instrum ...
... re may be here a subtle allusion, after Shakespeare's manner? ‘It I a fals ...
... a curious instance of the profundity of Shakespeare, as well as the fecundity of ...
... 16;wheel' by Lovelace—a writer of Shakespeare's age—is very apt. It ...
... a's speech, which Johnson, <i>The Globe Shakespeare</i> and many modern editors, ...
... or, cited in a note of <i>The Cambridge Shakespeare</i>, went a step further and ...
... .'” This, I think, comes near to Shakespeare's intention, though it seems ...
... his particular ballad was alluded to by Shakespeare, in this passage; but this, ...
... noch den Fenchel theilt.” [That Shakespeare places a deeper meaning in t ...
... trative quotations from the writings of Shakespeare's time. See A Handfull of Pl ...
... t always have You present in my sight.' Shakespeare has several allusions to <i> ...
... -82)]. See Ellacombe's <i>Plant Lore of Shakespeare</i> for this and the other f ...
... of the Folio for <i>pansies</i>, which Shakespeare appropriately makes his maid ...
... h this episode is based is also used by Shakespeare in <i>WT</i> [4.4.74-76 (188 ...
... er difficulty, too often ignored by the Shakespearean annotators, of selecting t ...
... flourished in Elizabethan England; and Shakespeare had already made use of it i ...
... : “<sc>Edinburgh Review</sc> (<i>Shakespearian Glossaries</i>, July, 1869 ...
... rd was habitually used in this sense in Shakespeare's day, but has now wholly lo ...
... (<i>doceo</i>). The word is not used by Shakespeare in any other place.”< ...
2932-3 Ophe. There's Fennill for you, and Colembines, there's
| Rewe for
2933-4 you, & heere's some for me, we may call it | {herbe of Grace} <Herbe-Grace> a Sondaies,
2934-5 <Oh> you {may} <must> weare your Rewe | with a difference, there's a Dasie, I would
2935-7 giue you | some Violets, but they witherd all when my Father {dyed,} <dy-| ed:>, 2935
2937 they say
... nstantly called ‘herb of grace.' Shakespeare so terms it in <i>R2</i> [3. ...
... nstantly called ‘herb of grace.' Shakespeare so terms it in ‘Richar ...
... is explanation is not mine,—it is Shakespeare's own; see <i>R2</i> [3.4.10 ...
... r you.' He adds that the explanation is Shakespeare's own, and refers to <i>R2 < ...
... her letters' – Gerald Massey's <i>Shakespeare's Sonnets</i> [1872], p. 480 ...
... 87 (2938)], it cannot be traced back to Shakespeare's time, but Chappell (i.237) ...
... out a subtle effect that could only be Shakespeare's. Ophelia's mad singing, he ...
... Plays, last edit. vol. vi. p. 223. Both Shakespeare and the authors of ‘Ea ...
... 3 = col1 </sc><i>minus </i>“Both Shakespeare . . . time.”</hangin ...
... by Charles Lamb) was much influenced by Shakespeare. <i>The Duchess of Malfi</i> ...
... of Jacobean tragedy, has more than one Shakespearian reminiscence. See <i>Index ...
... tical according to modern usage, but in Shakespeare's time it was frequently use ...
... ian Souls</b>] <sc>Roberts</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i ...
... ght that the Old Corrector spreads over Shakespeare should illumine not only Col ...