961 to 970 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... rs; but no other instance of its use in Shakespeare's time has been pointed out. ...
... ;even Christian' later than the time of Shakespeare.” </p. 261></pa ...
... ch aber nach Collier's Versicherung bei Shakespeare und seinen Zeitgenossen kein ...
... surance, one finds no second example in Shakespeare and his contemporaries. Nare ...
... throughout the middle ages, and also in Shakespeare's time. The annexed engravin ...
... er Kemp belonged to the same company as Shakespere when Hamlet was produced. (Se ...
... d. (See ‘Memoirs of the Actors in Shakespeare's Plays,' pp. 105. 115.) ...
... deten eine häufige Belustigung von Shakespeare's Vorfahren und Zeitgenossen ...
... ions form a frequent entertainment from Shakespeare's ancestors and contemporari ...
... as it is a clown's speech; besides, <i> Shakespeare</i> would have hardly put su ...
... me opinion of us prevailed generally in Shakespeare's time, and what was the ori ...
... nity, it would occur to every reader of Shakespeare to see what Portia has to sa ...
967) Commentary Note for lines 3246-49: 3246-7 Clow. Cudgell thy braines no more about it, for your
| dull asse wil
3247-8 not mend his pace with beating, and when | you are askt this question
3248-9 next, say a graue-maker, the | houses <that> hee makes lasts till Doomesday.
... to the fact that ‘lasts' stood in Shakespeare's manuscript, and that the s ...
... t of Virgil, had employed it on that of Shakespeare, he could hardly have offere ...
... 61, Letter 64): “. . . The next [Shakespearean difficulty] also involves ...
... er</sc> in the second edition of his <i>Shakespeare</i> adopts his Corrector's & ...
... . v.4) ‘a few, one <i>Yohan</i>.' Shakespeare got Johan along with the oth ...
... alliwell's Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare p. 88 wissen, zum Globusthea ...
... iwell's <i>Illustrations of the Life of Shakespeare</i>, p. 88, a <i>tap-house</ ...
... 201C;<i>to Yaughan</i>]] This is merely Shakespeare's English way of representin ...
... C;<i>to Yaughan</i>]] <sc>Elze</sc> (<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xi, 297), who ...
... d, and with its root found only once in Shakespeare, and in equally strange comp ...
... y my note in the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XI, 296 seq., ...
... to the text. See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XIV, 14 seq.&# ...
... e at present, was in all probability in Shakespeare's MS. In that famous Scene, ...
... mendations recorded in the <i>Cambridge Shakespeare</i>, the most plausible is t ...
... the name of an actual tavern-keeper in Shakespeare's London. Traces of a German ...
... to the fact that ‘lasts' stood in Shakespeare's manuscript, and that the s ...
... it not just as likely that he jest was Shakespeare's own? 1 It was quite in his ...
... was the name of a tavern or brother in Shakespeare's London. 2 And if the Q2 co ...
... eveloped in anote in <i>Hamlet</i> (New Shakespeare). ‘Yaughan' is not a W ...
... rticular alehouse-keeper, it is less in Shakespeare's manner than in Jonson's an ...
... 81-2)). <small>Another fancy would see Shakespeare here translating into Danish ...
969) Commentary Note for lines 3252-55: 3252 In youth when I did loue did loue,
{Song.} 3253 Me thought it was very sweet
3254 To contract ô the time for a my behoue,
3255 O me thought there {a} was nothing {a} meet.
... zas sung by the Grave-digger are not of Shakespeare's composition, but owe their ...
... C;This line has no sense, and doubtless Shakespeare made it untintelligible, in ...
... ine 62 [3253] has no meaning. Doubtless Shakespeare meant this in accordance wit ...
... he resulting nonsense beign designed by Shakespeare.”</para></cn> <cn> <s ...
... C;Mistakes might, of course, arise from Shakespeare's use of ambiguous forms whi ...
... Still, it is just as well to be sure of Shakespeare's intention. The ‘a' a ...
... ;And tract of time'. Surely, then, what Shakespeare meant him to sing was ‘ ...
... sc> ≈ standard (v1877) ; Noble <i>Shakespeare's Use of Song</i><sc> +</sc> ...
... course need not, have been designed by Shakespeare in fitting the song to the d ...
... ound together in Sternfeld, <i>Music in Shakespearean Tragedy</i>, 1963, pp. 162 ...
... , 1963, pp. 162-5, in his <i>Songs from Shakespeare's Tragedies</i>, 1964, pp. 1 ...
... as actually sung by the grave-digger on Shakespeare's stage we cannot know. Chap ...
970) Commentary Note for lines 3263-66: 3263 {Clow. } But age with his stealing steppes
{Song.} 3264 hath {clawed} <caught> me in his clutch,
3265 And hath shipped me {into} <intill> the land,
3266 as if I had neuer been such. 3266
... kömmling Platz machen müssen. Shakespeare folgt hierbei einer barbaris ...
... ich must make room for the new arrival. Shakespeare follows here a barbaric cust ...
... f these variants is a lesson at once in Shakespearian diction and in the kind of ...
... the first word in each pair belongs to Shakespeare, while the fact that the inf ...