91 to 100 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... [32-3, 39, 71-3, 154-5) and with which Shakespeare uses the suggestiveness of s ...
... y join'd to the Morning. Nor has our <i>Shakespeare </i>forgot to allude to the ...
... descriptions of the morning; perhaps <i>Shakespear</i> may claim the preference: ...
... <i>Greeks </i>and <i>Romans,</i> and <i>Shakespear</i> I think over all . . . . ...
... e till morning. But, indifferent as was Shakespeare to all dramatic rules and la ...
... e dew' —‘orient pearls.' In Shakespeare, morning is the lusty husban ...
... lightly along. Milton's is Corinthian, Shakespeare Doric; but both are works of ...
... tern clime, between morn and the pearl. Shakespeare, describing the same event, ...
... acquired art, but of an inforn faculty. Shakespeare displayed the fulness of its ...
... omes at all, the red and golden colour. Shakespeare refers to this characteristi ...
... o illustrate the changes Poel made on a Shakespearean stage: “Though ther ...
... the beginning of his attempt to restore Shakespeare to an Elizabethan stage. ...
... he eastern hill' (<i>FQ, </i>I. ii. 1). Shakespearean dawns include ‘the g ...
... Q2 <i>eastward </i>being unique in the Shakespearean texts.”</para> </c ...
... y? Theobald and Horatio,” <i>The Shakespeare Newsletter </i>43.3 (Fall 19 ...
... 'Easterne' which is found elsewhere in Shakespeare (especially in relation to t ...
... . . . the plural is frequently used by Shakespeare and writers of the sixteenth ...
... “The word is frequently used by Shakespeare to mean strong friendship be ...
... to move in with the presentation of the Shakespearean text than the first words ...
... the 1616 Ben Jonson Folio, repositions Shakespeare as a contemporary dramatist, ...
... hed,</i> but it apparently did not suit Shakespeare to write a tragedy in which ...
... quently used is not uncharacteristic of Shakespeare. Cf. 'Eskales' in the first ...
... separate entry in Q2 (cf. Greg, [<i>The Shakespeare First Folio</i>] p. 330). Th ...
... of Ophelia is an error by "the revising Shakespeare." Neither Q1 nor Q2 names h ...
... l name, altered in ‘Polonius' in Shakespeare's latest revision; Chambers ...
... d Chamberlain. I have little doubt that Shakespeare regarded him as correspondin ...
... lf-way through Claudius's speech [221]. Shakespeare must have meant them to be o ...
... stage, the further we are getting from Shakespeare. [The] ideal version of the ...
... staging productions (as by the American Shakespeare Co., Staunton, VA, have demo ...
... of the Last Age</i> (qtd. Vickers, <i> Shakespeare,</i> 1974, 1:191): “ ...
... me was current in Warwickshire and that Shakespeare's own son (b. 1585) was chri ...
... nt against it in <i>Art and Artifice in Shakespeare, </i>pp. 94-5, 101. <p. ...
... ning and worthy opposite of the Prince. Shakespeare gives him some sixty lines a ...
... terest in the crown, and it may be that Shakespeare had in mind how in earlier v ...
... de of speech very common, not only with Shakespeare, but others, ‘the safe ...
... n frenzied grief a few short weeks ago. Shakespeare has presented the facts in s ...