251 to 260 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... f his audience in the Ghost once again, Shakespeare employs the most arresting m ...
... 8): <p. 32> “Lawrence (<i>Shakespeare's Workshop, </i>p. 115) call ...
... ns will be found in the <i>Variorum </i>Shakespeare, and in Douce;”</para ...
... appropriate to this drunken dance than Shakespeare's ‘swaggering.' I need ...
... touch of northern local colour, such as Shakespeare may have got from his friend ...
... cates some kind of Teutonic dance which Shakespeare introduces as local colour.& ...
... Hüpfauf was apocryphal. Presumably Shakespeare knew of the upspring as a fe ...
... ted in large quantities into England in Shakespeare's time).”</para></cn> ...
... ] <i>remugiit verò lata tellus.</i>Shakesp. in [<i>Jn.</i> 3.1.303. (1236)] ...
... nce famous, and the Danes especially in Shakespeare's day. Cf. Greene, <i> Mourn ...
... imes in <i>Hamlet</i> than in any other Shakespeare play, and given a full range ...
... follow and Hamlet deplore this 'custom' Shakespeare uses his knowledge of Danish ...
... not know of the custom. The play shows Shakespeare in two minds about him. In s ...
... viii; G. F. Bradby, <i>Short Studies in Shakespeare, </i> pp. 145 ff. </para> <p ...
... incident to the manor. In this passage Shakespeare probably uses the word manor ...
... eceding an account of Wittenberg) which Shakespeare may well have read, speaks o ...
... pected, and too bad to belong to <i><sc>Shakespeare</sc></i>;) at the Bottom of ...
... ought too verbose,<small> but certainly Shakespear's</small>.”</para></cn ...
... trance of the ghost, I set right in <sc>Shakespeare </sc><i>restor'd</i>, so sha ...
... any Objection against Conjecture in <i>Shakespeare</i>'s Case. where no Origina ...
... d calm for the awful occasion, and that Shakespeare may have desired it to be le ...
... oyal riot in lines [612-16]. A trait of Shakespeare's character may be herein in ...
... ndoing. Here we seem to be presented by Shakespeare himself with a formula for t ...
... the matter itself was common knowledge, Shakespeare seems to have been particula ...
... r <i>embrace</i>: in both senses <i><sc>Shakespeare</sc></i> has more than once ...
... r of special notoriety at the time when Shakespeare wrote; and marvellous anecdo ...
... ; Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “Could Shakespeare have had in his mind any pun ...