661 to 670 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... eing probably caught from the line above [<i>making so bold</i>]<i> </i>. Here Shakespeare would have avoided a rhyme; and from <i> Hamlet's </i> fourth speec ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... the Ff.; Qq by evident attraction from <i>sold</i> above, print <i>unfold</i>. Shakespeare would of course have avoided a rhyme in the middle of a passage of b ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... eing probably caught from the line above [<i>making so bold</i>]<i> </i>. Here Shakespeare would have avoided a rhyme; and from <i> Hamlet's </i> fourth speec ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... the Ff.; Qq by evident attraction from <i>sold</i> above, print <i>unfold</i>. Shakespeare would of course have avoided a rhyme in the middle of a passage of b ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... ct, from being a man of mere words, he has now become a man of action. No doubt Shakespeare was indebted more or less to the old history of Hamlet, whether in t ...
... hich an actor would be likely to stumble. Thus, though I make little doubt that Shakespeare was himself responsible for it, there is something to be said on aes ...
... e than the concrete that it is usually assumed that ‘villainies' was what Shakespeare meant to write.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1987<tab> </tab><sc> ...
... Text and Pointing. <i>Making a Prologue to his Brains</i> is such a Phrase as SHAKESPEARE would never have us'd, to mean, <i>e're I could form my Thoughts to ...
... ;argument' or summary of the action to follow, it is tempting to speculate that Shakespeare is referring here to his own manner of working, which may well have ...