421 to 430 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... But it is not at all necessarily right. Shakespeare has metaphors quite as hasty ...
... > Singer is “vindicating” Shakespeare from “the interpolati ...
... sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “Here Shakespeare uses the word in its legal s ...
... eal enormity. The Cl. Pr. Edd. say that Shakespeare here uses lies in its legal ...
... x201C;This alludes to <i>bird-lime.</i> Shakespeare uses the same again, <i>2H6< ...
... a common figure for any sort of snare. Shakespeare often uses it so.”</p ...
... n work; but I do venture to assert that Shakespeare did not intend us to believe ...
... b> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(<i>Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton</i>, Lecture 12, ...
... s seen a manuscript play of the time of Shakespeare intended for the use of a th ...
... d (= <i>but</i>) so he goes to heaven!' Shakespeare uses this meaning of ‘ ...
... have been held to be an excuse. But if Shakespeare had anticipated the criticis ...
... ernment, and social condition, in which Shakespeare has laid the scene of the pl ...
... bears every mark of being exactly what Shakespeare wished it to be: it is emine ...
... raying,' which proves beyond cavil that Shakespeare wrote ‘pat' not ‘ ...
... mulations present in public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifests the limitations of ...
... these lines does by no means belong to Shakespeare exclusively, but is to be fo ...
... r something he could not read, and what Shakespeare actually wrote must be simil ...
... y means 'inferior' or 'illegitimate' in Shakespeare (see especially Edmund's com ...
... 1C;auditor”; used by others than Shakespeare of the rendering of accounts ...
... mulations present in public speech. Yet Shakespeare manifests the limitations of ...
... 'd his frequent Use of this Word, in my SHAKESPEARE <i>restor'd</i>; so shall sp ...
... ernment, and social condition, in which Shakespeare has laid the scene of the pl ...
... 857): “To <i>hend </i>is used by Shakespeare for, to <i>seize</i>, to <i> ...
... holder, a seizer, a grappler. But when Shakespeare makes Hamlet say, when he wi ...
... ay be for <i>hint</i>, which usually in Shakespeare means ‘opportunity, oc ...
... verb of the same form used elsewhere by Shakespeare twice; the meaning would the ...
... soul; her conclusion, that the reaction Shakespeare intended to produce in his a ...