221 to 230 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... c: “I am perswaded [sic] that <i>Shakespeare</i> was too good a Judge of ...
... ts </i>and <i>Instructions</i> which <i>Shakespear </i>makes his statesman give ...
... not help remarking the excellency of <i>Shakespear</i>'s advice, both here [in < ...
... word <i>beware</i> is used by Lyly and Shakespeare in these passages. There is ...
... Wright (ed. 1872): “Mr. Rushton, Shakespeare's Euphuism, pp. 45, 46, has ...
... </i> (1591, ch. 6, pp. 93-105); and in Shakespeare himself, <i>AWW</i> 1.1.54 f ...
... oes Lyly, who has often been claimed as Shakespeare's source, but the correspond ...
... Several were proverbial maxims, though Shakespeare characteristically phrases t ...
... lends to a friend loses double' (F725). Shakespeare stages a similar occasion in ...
... phor of <i>grappling</i>; <small>but <i>Shakespeare</i> frequently changes his m ...
... Malone was right in his conjecture that Shakespeare wrote, ‘<i>hooks</i> o ...
... #8216;grapple' the very reverse of what Shakespeare intended; for grappling with ...
... various commentators also exemplify the Shakespeare wars.</para> </cn> <cn> <si ...
... i> occurs thirteen lines below. May not Shakespeare have written <i>stale?</i>&# ...
... riginal reading <i>courage</i>. Perhaps Shakespeare's word was <i>court-ape</i>. ...
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... this reading is that <i>comrade</i> is Shakespeare's revision in F of the unusu ...
... sigla> <hanging>Reed: claims Bacon is Shakespeare, supported by <i>Promus</i> ...
... sures</i> in this weighty business.' <i>Shakesp.</i>[<i> R3 </i>2.2.144 (1420)]. ...
... ensure</i> of this hellish villain.' <i>Shakesp</i>. [<i>Oth</i>. 5.2.368 (3682) ...
... pense of money' (quoted from <i>Life in Shakespeare's England</i>, compiled by J ...
... jectives were often used adverbially in Shakespeare's days.</para> <para>“ ...
... an earnest hope that the next editor of Shakespeare will give, ‘Are most s ...
... (a set=12 arrows); and every archer of Shakespeare's day had his <i>first sheaf ...
... Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare</i>, p. 206. — (Steeve ...
... Mr. Collier's and Mr. Knight's eds. of Shakespeare</i>, p. 206. — (Steeve ...
... ectured in the preface to the Cambridge Shakespeare, and as Mr. R. G. White read ...
... e required is a very familiar word with Shakespeare.”</para> </cn> <cn><s ...
... hat the abstract use has no parallel in Shakespeare. Yet see OED chief sb. 10 an ...
... ld like to recover the smallest word of Shakespeare's, it seems unlikely that an ...
... hat a somewhat unusual word appeared in Shakespeare's MS., which eventually turn ...
... an easy eye or ear error, and arrive at Shakespeare's words and meaning: ‘ ...