1031 to 1040 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... en Ausbagen haben <i>I'll do't </i>nur einmal.” [The artful pause, which Shakespeare allows to enter after <i>I'll do't</i>, the old Corrector understood ...
... 4tos. is given to the Queen, to whose character it is better suited. But if Shakespeare designed it for the King, he may be justified, perhaps, by some such ...
... at [Q2] contains the true assignment of these lines. See Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare=Gesellschaft, XVI, 239.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1885<tab> </ ...
... 78) has been misunderstood. Here he seeks to remedy this by comparing works of Shakespeare and Milton to the Romantic model, specifically considering Gertrude' ...
... written on this word to little purpose, according to the usual commenting upon Shakespeare. To disclose simply means to open something, and thus show that whi ...
... hochgelben Flaum bedeckt.” [“The reliable natural observation in Shakespeare is similar to a brilliant passage by Homer. The young of the house p ...
... > </tab><sc>Marshall</sc> (1875, p. 101): “This is a curious instance of Shakespeare's accuracy in those illustrative deails which he is so fond of intro ...
... memory.”] Here we have hint of another way of accounting for this fact. Shakespeare knew that the deeper griefs of the soul are nursed and guarded in si ...
... inst. Are two ingenious remarks by Mr. B. Street on two well-known passages in Shakespeare. With regard to the first, ‘and dog will have his <i>bay</i>' ...
... uld scarcely have adopted a <i>meaningless </i>bit of slang.' <sc>Elze</sc> (<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, Bd. xi) adds a fourth example from <i>Summe's Last Wil ...
... b>] <sc>Elze</sc> (ed. 1882): “See my note in the Jahrbuch der Deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft, XI, 297 seq. The meaning seems to be this: Every cur w ...
... in his purpose by what had passed; everything is most ingeniously contrived by Shakespeare to fan the flame of his resentment against Hamlet.” </p. 1 ...
... n houre of quiet shortly shall we see;' and it is obvious that, whether because Shakespeare happened here to form his ‘sh' like ‘th', or for some ot ...
... of quiet thereby shall we see,' and so made sense, though not at all the sense Shakespeare had intended. The example is instructive in more ways than one.  ...
... ab> </tab></i></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>“It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write down every one of these directions in his m ...
... finitive clauses, justify the suspicion that the first fifty-five lines are not Shakespeare's.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1881<tab> </tab>hud3</sc></si ...
... ab> </tab></i></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>“It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write down every one of these directions in his m ...
... voice to young Fortinbras who has ‘some rights of memory in the kingdom'. Shakespeare, as is his custom, gives us the quiet close of classical tragedy, an ...
... unsupported by legal evidence in open court. I persist in observing that from Shakespeare's drama no proofs of the guilt of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern can b ...
... ab> </tab></i></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>“It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write down every one of these directions in his m ...
... unsupported by legal evidence in open court. I persist in observing that from Shakespeare's drama no proofs of the guilt of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern can b ...
... ab> </tab></i></para></cn> <cn> <sigla>“It is of course conceivable that Shakespeare did not trouble to write down every one of these directions in his m ...