291 to 300 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... e [quotes] has something in it truly <i>Shakespearian: deprive, </i>is used in i ...
... Warburton tells us ‘it is evident Shakespear wrote;' that is, according to ...
... ven in the notes to <i>King Lear </i>of Shakespeare's use of the word <i>deprive ...
... s his image forcibly before his reader, Shakespeare leaves it to him to arrange ...
... 68): “here used elliptically (as Shakespeare uses some verbs) to express ...
... 2>“Some of the obscurities in Shakespeare's text arise from the consil ...
... as <i>bereave</i> or <i>rob; </i>but in Shakespeare it corresponds to our <i>abl ...
... r of Sir Thomas Dale, 1616 (the year of Shakespeare's death). He calls Virginia ...
... s are unique to Q2, Edwards argues that Shakespeare intended to delete them 'as ...
... ill </sc>(1860, p. 259): “ . . . Shakespeare entertained the medical opin ...
... ke</sc> (ed. 1868): “<small>Here Shakespeare distinctly associates the <i ...
... e</b>] <sc>Hibbard</sc> (ed. 1987): "In Shakespeare’s day the arteries wer ...
... (= Latin. <i>nervus</i>); never used by Shakespeare in the modern sense. Milton ...
... ed. “At such a critical juncture Shakespeare will not want the impetus of ...
... t mounts to its first great climax. On Shakespeare's stage the Ghost and Hamlet ...
... d with a delicacy of feeling that often shakes his fortitude, with sensibility t ...
... urning sulphur of the Limbo-lake'). But Shakespeare sheds the classical allusion ...
... x201C;It ought not to be forgotten that Shakespeare has many words, either of ad ...
... 'd, unanointed, unaneal'd.' But whether Shakespeare may thence be deemed a favou ...
... on are not at all characteristic of the Shakespearean ghosts, who are </p. 10 ...
... t; usually the most reticent of beings. Shakespeare in this part of the play was ...
... long with 762 by those who contend that Shakespeare gives us a 'Catholic' ghost. ...
... what <i>Hamlet</i> thereby registers is Shakespeare's own resistance, in the red ...
... may be Hamlet's resistance rather than Shakespeare's; and the ghost's cries for ...