301 to 310 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... en misprinted for <i>ostent, </i>a word Shakespeare not unfrequently uses, in th ...
... lt;p.721> “In Mr. Donbavand's Shakespeare emendations, in the <i>Athen ...
... m any of the books on Falconry to which Shakespeare might have access. I have al ...
... south wind is generally represented by Shakespeare as a wind of evil contagion. ...
... a handsaw' (<i>1H4</i> II. iv. 161) led Shakespeare to <i>hawk</i> via a pun on ...
... granted to the Globe Company, to which Shakespeare belonged, dated 17 May, 1603 ...
... : <p. 194> “For his part, Shakespeare wrote pastoral-comical in <i ...
... is, in any case, no hard evidence that Shakespeare concerned himself with liter ...
... the piece. But in the Gothic drama, as Shakespeare found and fixed it, the chan ...
... f Israel.</i> A copy of the ballad, as Shakespeare knew it, was reprinted in Ev ...
... f Israel.</i> A copy of the ballad, as Shakespeare knew it, was reprinted in Ev ...
... and not Italian, as the commentaros on Shakespeare assert) are a kind of clogs ...
... ><sc>1879<tab> </tab><tab> </tab><i>new shakespeare society</i></sc></sigla><han ...
... > chopine</b>] <sc>Anon</sc>. (<i>New Shakespeare Society'sTransactions</i> <i ...
... nius, was a dish to their palate, which Shakespeare did not stick to serve up to ...
... . 102> “Why, it is asked, did Shakespeare here introduce a passage qui ...
... 4 LN). This is still true even though Shakespeare may have been influenced by ...
... tter tell how to use it'. Harbage (<i>Shakespeare and the Rival Traditions</i> ...
... place, have concurred in thinking that Shakespeare produced this long passage w ...
... , we must appeal to Hamlet, that is, to Shakespeare himself in this matter; who, ...
... tices of humanity. Such is the man whom Shakespeare has judiciously chosen to re ...
... r not, is not the question; but whether Shakespeare esteemed them so. That he di ...
... itation. It is by no means proved, that Shakespeare has <i>employed the same tho ...
... what can we infer from thence, but that Shakespeare was sometimes wrong in spite ...
... oet had conceived</i>.</para> <para>Had Shakespeare made one unsuccessful attemp ...
... greeing in Dr. Warburton's notion, that Shakespeare had any thoughts of writing ...
... at the piece in question is the work of Shakespeare himself, and a good deal of ...
... vation does above simple nature. Hence Shakespeare has composed the play in Ham ...
... more remarkably, though less remarked, Shakespeare takes the opportunity of the ...
... ics have ever seriously maintained that Shakespeare lifted from some old tragedy ...
... l difference of purpose : the speech in Shakespeare has to stand out from the dr ...
... to heraldry, and signifies <i>red</i>. Shakespeare has it again in <i>Timon</i> ...