941 to 950 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... para> <para><small>3. White with frost. Shakespeare. 4. Mouldy; mossy; rusty; <i ...
... Lowell (Among my Books, p. 185) notices Shakespeare's delicate art in drawing ou ...
... ance how much better the F1 reading is. Shakespeare is not likely to have writte ...
... superiority is obvious at a glance. For Shakespeare intended Ophelia to make her ...
... d, and particularly in the county where Shakespeare lived. Thus far Mr. Warner. ...
... tes): “Beisly supplies in his <i>Shakespeare's Garden</i>, p. 159, the fo ...
... an this, to be the long purple to which Shakespeare refers.”</para></cn> ...
... , L; ‘ and ‘Long Purples of Shakespeare's Hamlet, 4.7, supposed to b ...
... les</i> need little comment:<small> all Shakespeare's other references to them ( ...
... rary herbals, have been recognized from Shakespeare's account of them and their ...
... xtended to a species which has not ((<i>Shakespeare's Garden</i>, p. 160)). See ...
... >N&Q</i>, x, 225-7; Grindon, <i>The Shakespeare Flora</i>, p. 129; Britten a ...
... 1C;<i>Liberal</i> is repeatedly used by Shakespeare for <i>loose-tongued</i>.&#x ...
... d. 1982): “ We cannot know which Shakespeare had particularly in mind, bu ...
... rightly. I have no doubt whatever that Shakespeare's copy here made a false sta ...
... rious species of <i>Orchis</i> . . . in Shakespeare probably the Early Purple Or ...
... f these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of ...
... off, occurs twice in the latter form in Shakespeare. See [<i>Lr.</i> 4.2.34 (000 ...
... hos. It is a character which nobody but Shakespeare could have drawn, and to the ...
... and or how </p. 71> <p. 72> Shakespeare came to know of them is not ...
... Dr. A. W. Pollard. It is possible that Shakespeare had in mind also Psalms cxlv ...
... f these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of ...
... ng how it could get into Q2 if not from Shakespeare's ms. See [3158] LN [Longer ...
... ongs we have heard ((<i>New Readings in Shakespeare</i>, 1956, II, 226)). Perhap ...
... e without lifting a finger to help her. Shakespeare wrote for a theatre audience ...
... s implausible at this point. In view of Shakespeare's total inconsistency about ...
... inappropriate under any circumstance in Shakespeare's time.”</para></cn> ...
... is speech seemed far less artificial to Shakespeare's contemporaries than it doe ...