141 to 150 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... e</b> omitted in archaic poetry. . . . Shakespeare rarely indulges in this arch ...
... ravel abroad without permission, and in Shakespeare's Denmark the same laws appl ...
... hat by the time he had reached the verb Shakespeare regarded <i>nobility</i> as ...
... aster Goursey'; and it is possible that Shakespeare used <i>impart</i> for 'impa ...
... ar as its purport,' and thus it conveys Shakespeare's meaning. The emendation is ...
... dating its Time, I shall not justify <i>Shakespeare</i>; I think it is a fault i ...
... irty years old, Blackstone could charge Shakespeare with a slip of memory.ȁ ...
... There was a university at Wittenberg in Shakespeare's time, and he has therefore ...
... ed. 1872): “Ritson suggests that Shakespeare knew of Wittenberg from the ...
... of Wittenberg well known in England in Shakespeare's time.”</para></cn> ...
... was at the height of its reputation in Shakespeare's day and was much esteemed ...
... t seems to have been much frequented in Shakespeare's day by Danes studying abro ...
... student by Elizabethan standards. It is Shakespeare's addition to the story to d ...
... estant, he would be the only one in the Shakespearean canon. </para></cn> <cn> ...
... rs to command in the way of honesty</b> Shakespeare— 1596 [<i>MV </i>3.4.3 ...
... 11]. </p. 257> <p. 258> <i>Shakespear</i> keeps up the characters o ...
... s. . . . And yet as he wrote the play, Shakespeare . . . had also imagined him ...
... : “In the second part of the New Shakespeare Society's <i>Transactions</i ...
... the references to Wittenburg, they show Shakespeare taking some care with local ...
... Danish rowsa'; but the suggestion that Shakespeare uses <i>rouse</i> to give a ...
... lustrated by a celebrated Passage in <i>Shakespeare</i>'s <i>Hamlet</i>, where t ...
... remarks than a celebrated passage in <i>Shakespear</i>'s <i>Hamlet</i>, where th ...
... position to whatever ear I may have for Shakespearian poetry, that we must hence ...
... is recognized in the early editions of Shakespeare.</para> <para>“But wh ...
... evidently the same word that is used my Shakespeare. But with Elizabethan author ...
... ., a work which has been printed by the Shakespeare Society, he does not any whe ...
... n Article X, in the first volume of the Shakespeare Society's Papers, Mr. Halliw ...
... sing Mr. Halliwell's reading to be what Shakespeare intended, but which I cannot ...
... ed opinion of the mass of the lovers of Shakespeare.</para> <para>“I am i ...
... ound, that every fresh idea relating to Shakespeare requires to be amply discuss ...
... elt.'— I cannot help feeling that Shakespeare intended to write <i>too, to ...
... language.</para> <para>“Whatever Shakespeare intended—and I do not ...
... >“I cannot see how any reader of Shakespeare can for one moment suppose, ...
... iven to compel us to alter the sense of Shakespeare's line, which it certainly a ...
... it.</para> <para>“As a lover of Shakespeare, and a well wisher to the So ...
... rbs and adjectives in the literature of Shakespeare's day. For instance,—& ...
... re and <i>most most</i> loving breast.' Shakespeare's Sonnet CX. ‘She wept ...
... too too much.' Hunter (Illustrations of Shakespeare, [2: 217-8] gives several ex ...
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... <br/> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... doubt that this speech is punctuated as Shakespeare intended.”</para></cn ...
... , melting, voluntary death — that Shakespeare follows again in <i>Hamlet.< ...
... at <i>solid </i>was the adjective which Shakespeare had in his original manuscri ...
... rect; though there was nothing comic to Shakespeare's audience in the phrase 'so ...
... loquy. Margaret Webster comments in <i>Shakespeare Without Tears</i> that for s ...
... s of infinite suggestiveness that makes Shakespeare the supreme dramatic artist ...
... peech, it would hardly be surprising if Shakespeare heard the word 'sullied' as ...
... ara> </cn> <cn><sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... Latin sense; but it is not peculiar to Shakespeare.” </para></cn> <cn> < ...
... found in any other serious character of Shakespeare. &#x201D; </p. 124> ...