891 to 900 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... has been made use of to prove that <i> Shakespeare</i> sometimes forgot his ch ...
... /p. 423></para><!-- <para>∑<i>Shakespeare's Scholar: </i> I'm not quit ...
... surprise, Mr. Grant <sc>White</sc> (<i>Shakespeare's Scholar </i> , &c. p. ...
... ich bis jetz erhalten hat.— Grant Shakespeare's Scholar 420." ["So read Q2 ...
... ant <sc>White</sc> in his edition of <i>Shakespeare</i> prints ‘commune.'< ...
... here is ‘converse', as usually in Shakespeare, not ‘share' or ‘ ...
... bald sketch found in the first quarto. Shakespeare seems to have spent great ca ...
... with the accent on the first syllable; Shakespeare varies the accent to suit hi ...
... “accented in different places by Shakespeare on the first or on the secon ...
... ostent, Quite from hismelf to God.' <i>Shakesp. </i>[<i>H5 </i>a.s.? (2871)] &# ...
... h <i>trophies</i> do adorn thy tomb. <i>Shakespeare</i>. ‘Twice will I not ...
... And split thy heart for wearing it.' <i>Shakespeare</i>. ‘In ancient times ...
... ostent, Quite from hismelf to God.' <i>Shakesp. Henry V</i>. ‘There lie t ...
... <i>trophies</i> do adorn thy tomb.' <i>Shakespeare</i>. ‘Twice will I not ...
... And split thy heart for wearing it.' <i>Shakespeare</i>. ‘In ancient times ...
... 857>“Almost the only play of Shakespeare, in which mere accidents ind ...
... d its present maritime significance, in Shakespeare's time, the pun alone is con ...
... ships both in the pages of Saxo and in Shakespeare's time. For a possible analo ...
... nnection would be with an incident that Shakespeare must recently have come upon ...
... captured and crucified. Whether or not Shakespeare remembered this incident, th ...
... al warfare and piracy was so unclear in Shakespeare's time as to be virtually no ...
... ot doubt that ‘give' was the word Shakespeare wrote; cf. [2<i>H</i>4 5.2.8 ...
... <i>crimefull </i>occurs nowhere else in Shakespeare's works.”</para></cn> ...
... </i>This word is not used elsewhere by Shakespeare. The Qq. have <i>criminal</i ...
... 1D; produced by a compositor misreading Shakespeare's original reading.. His con ...
... ther (I) the compositor, unable to read Shakespeare's word, set up some nonsense ...
... (ii) the corrector found the word that Shakespeare intended in type, but misund ...
... it, or (iii) the compositor, baffled by Shakespeare's handwriting, himself emend ...
... sse' F1 gives us the authentic words of Shakespeare; and second, that their Q2 v ...
... be considered a ‘first short' of Shakespeare's as any of the other Q2 var ...
... the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...
... ]. The more tenable explanation is that Shakespeare wrote <i>criminall</i> in hi ...
... or's inclusion of a rejected reading in Shakespeare's autograph.</para></cn> <cn ...
... I assume that once again Q2 preserves a Shakespearean false start. Claudius is & ...
... line, looks like a first attempt which Shakespeare then tidied up by omitting < ...
... ;wanting nerve, weak. Not used again by Shakespeare. ‘Sinewed' occurs in [ ...
... 1890): “This word is not used by Shakespeare elsewhere; <i>sinewed</i> on ...
... ed</sc> thinks that the spring to which Shakespeare refers is the dropping-well ...
... ed that the baths of King's Newsham, in Shakespeare's county, Warwickshire, have ...
... ould</b> is the proper reading but that Shakespeare's penchant for writing an &# ...
... o his [Greg's] argument [that traces of Shakespeare's hand can be found in these ...
... sc> (ed. 1939): “Nearer home for Shakespere were the baths of King's New< ...