1 to 10 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... ;The younger sort takes much delight in Shakespeares Venus, & Adonis: but hi ...
... 2-2519], continues “as indeed <i>Shakespear</i> is in the former Scene, w ...
... some <i>hearsay particulars concerning Shakespeare </i>from a MS. of <i>Aubrey< ...
... e us that for [<i>Hamlet</i>'s plot] <i>Shakespeare </i>must have read <i>Saxo G ...
... ent Gentleman, to whom the lovers of <i>Shakespeare</i> will some time or other ...
... Tragedians</i>,' and very plainly at <i>Shakespeare</i> in particular; which wil ...
... n: ‘It was thought a praise to <i>Shakespeare, </i>that he scarce ever blo ...
... us, that for [<i>Hamlet</i>'s plot] <i>Shakespeare </i>must have read <i>Saxo G ...
... ent Gentleman, to whom the lovers of <i>Shakespeare</i> will some time or other ...
... e] so happily as it is delineated by <i>Shakespeare.</i>'</para> <para>“V ...
... ntiments indeed there are none, that <i>Shakespeare </i>could borrow; nor any ex ...
... te:</b> Capell's work, <i>The School of Shakespeare: or, authentic Extracts from ...
... 6;The younger sort take much delight in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis; but his ...
... r. Farmer's <i>Essay on the Learning of Shakespeare</i>, p. 85, 86, second editi ...
... orious tragedians,' and very plainly at Shakespeare in particular,—‘ ...
... 6;The younger sort take much delight in Shakespeare's Venus and Adonis; but his ...
... m Dr. Farmer's Essay on the Learning of Shakespeare, p. 85, 6, second edition.</ ...
... orious tragedians,' and very plainly at Shakespeare in particular,—‘ ...
... r. Farmer's <i>Essay on the Learning of Shakespeare</i>, p. 85, 86, second editi ...
... ): on Q1, “ . . . <small>we have Shakespeare's first conception of the pl ...
... s, though in a mutilated form,' &c. Shakespeare <i>Commentaries</i>, vol. ii ...
... bert Cohn's curious volume. entitled <i>Shakespeare in Germany in the Sixteenth ...
... 1947): “The other play in which Shakespeare devotes a whole act to expos ...
... Ho</i> [see above] to demonstrate that Shakespeare's contemporaries thought of ...
... 00): “The theme running through Shakespearean sequences involving sentin ...
... lly depends; and indeed so artfully has Shakespeare wrought upon his great patro ...
... ud </i>Furness, ed. 1877): “That Shakespeare meant to put an effect in th ...
... 9, <i>Lectures</i>, 2:139):“That Shakespear supplied a beauty to the acto ...
... /sc>, ed. 1844): “In nothing has Shakespeare been more successful, than i ...
... them with a supernatural acuteness; and Shakespeare was not unmindful of the fac ...
... other? The reply is, of course, that in Shakespeare's theatre <i>Hamlet </i>woul ...
... nges of a play. In the opening scene of Shakespeare's "Hamlet," for instance, a ...
... ra> </cn> <cn> <sigla>2005<tab></tab><i>Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... llows [3-9] is an exquisite specimen of Shakespeare's attention to the subtlest ...
... hich strikingly exemplifies how careful Shakespeare was to preserve entire consi ...
... )], ‘Thy much goodness.' Abbott's Shakespeare Grammar, § 51.</para> < ...
... k at hart</b>.] <sc>Kliman </sc>(1996): Shakespeare may be demonstrating that th ...
... ote</b>: See essay by Willems in Global Shakespeare</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1776 ...
... on, it is plain, by <i>rivals</i>, that Shakespeare means, those men who were ap ...
... languages. This is the only passage of Shakespeare in which the word is employe ...
... ning, and it is conclusive to show what Shakespeare intended. The reverie of Mar ...
... these letters in Kellner, <i>Restoring Shakespeare, </i>pp. 206-8.”</par ...
... haps indicates that someone (Marcellus, Shakespeare, the scribe or compositor) e ...