61 to 70 of 1169 Entries from All Files for "shakes" in All Fields
... but not in the Folios. Some think that Shakespeare omitted these splendid lines ...
... 16;cut.' Whether such cuts were made by Shakespeare or not we have no means of k ...
... such as Edwards and Hibbard argue that Shakespeare intended to delete them, the ...
... merely intended as an advertisement for Shakespeare's own <i>Julius Caesar</i>. ...
... t given [by Hor.]; both senses occur in Shakespeare; the latter gives the better ...
... some calamity. Hibbard points out that Shakespeare's only other use of the word ...
... onunciation of <i>th </i>as <i>t </i>in Shakespeare's time, which was asserted i ...
... 2, pp. 12-13): <p. 12> “<i>Shakespeare</i> seems to have had before ...
... the translations of 31 and 22 lines: <i>Shakespear </i>has but eight: and perhap ...
... must be allowed that a contemporary of Shakespeare has so employed it: ‘T ...
... o ask if Lucan had been translated when Shakespeare wrote <i>Hamlet</i>. The ear ...
... s the Play; he murders Rome; he murders Shakespeare; and he murders Me.' [[But t ...
... 3): “For the omens that follow Shakespeare is indebted to North's Trans ...
... lm', a traditional symbol of triumph (a Shakespearean coinage, according to <i>O ...
... ius Caesar's assisination, a subtext of Shakespeare's play . . . . ”</par ...
... d shriek and squeal about the streets.' Shakespeare had probably in his mind the ...
... 006): “The portents described by Shakespeare's Caska and Cassius on the n ...
... ead' (<i>JC</i> 1.3.63 , 74 ; 2.2.18 ); Shakespeare is using Plutarch ('Life of ...
... ch prodigies must have been familiar to Shakespeare, for, in the year 1572, 1596 ...
... eaning. This being so, may we not, with Shakespeare's license and title to exemp ...
... se two words si extremely probable with Shakespeare!—he did not apparently ...
... and contemptible ballads, in order that Shakespeare might be sanctioned in the u ...
... ed the latter word too learned for poor Shakespere's small acquirements. They wo ...
... n there remain a doubt, therefore, that Shakespeare, intended the passage to rea ...
... x201D; and “disaster”: if Shakespeare “wrote ‘asters, ...
... clined to believe that it now stands as Shakespeare wrote it, and accordingly pr ...
... old compositor. We do not imagine that Shakespeare used so affected and unpopul ...
... clined to believe that it now stands as Shakespeare wrote it, and accordingly pr ...
... tance.' . . . But, bearing in mind that Shakespeare uses the word ‘as' man ...
... y this version, and I have to submit to Shakespeare students and editors, that o ...
... Plutarch's <i>Life of Caesar </i>or in Shakespeare's <i>Julius Caesar, </i>whic ...
... nomical phenomena fresh in the minds of Shakespeare's audience and very terrifyi ...
... ossessing title, <i>The Secret Drama of Shakespeare's Sonnets Unfolded</i> (Supp ...
... on by Gerald Massey (<i>Secret Drama of Shakespeare's Sonnets, </i>1872, Sup. p. ...
... the signification we now use it in. <i>Shakespear </i>uses it in its primary se ...
... aining no verb. Is it not probable that Shakespeare wrote <i>did usher</i>, inst ...
... ty,' it was coming into the language in Shakespeare's day . . . . ”</para ...
... several eclipses of the sun or moon in Shakespeare's time.”</para></cn> ...
... (ed. 1872): “only found here in Shakespeare, though he uses ‘precu ...
... d. 1912): “not elsewhere used by Shakespeare, though Malone quotes <i>pre ...
... se compounds so frequently occurring in Shakespeare's works, and which in this c ...