11 to 20 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... urton's conjecture, that ‘perhaps Shakespeare wrote, <i>spright</i>.'  ...
... eighton</sc> (ed. 1891): “ . . . Shakespeare treats the clause <b>What</b ...
... k, and maintains an equal Character. <i>Shakespeare </i>has strictly observed th ...
... ly, and with what dramatic fitness, has Shakespeare introduced this touch to mar ...
... tronomers have recently argued that, if Shakespeare had a specific star in mind, ...
... Studies,</i> p. 140ff.) and Sprague (<i>Shakespeare and the Actors,</i> p. 128). ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... transitive sense. As to <i>harrow, </i>Shakespeare only uses the verb three tim ...
... sc>, ed. 1958) “conjectures that Shakespeare wrote ‘harows' with th ...
... ing</i>, to the following words used by Shakespeare as nouns: [quotes only <i>di ...
... >Avouch</i> does not occur as a noun in Shakespeare other than in all three text ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... and <i>parley</i> are elsewhere used by Shakespeare only of a friendly conferenc ...
... arallel for such a use of <i>parle, </i>Shakespeare more than once uses the verb ...
... the corrupted word shews, I think, that Shakespeare wrote —<i>Polacks.</i> ...
... however, as twice elsewhere in the play Shakespeare employs ‘Polack,' in t ...
... the corrupted word shows, I think, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks.</i>' </par ...
... Why does the corrupted words show, that Shakespeare wrote <i>Polacks? </i>Why do ...
... s there be added to them a passage from Shakespeare or from one of his contempor ...
... that it “gives the sense of what Shakespeare intended, i.e. that the dead ...
... In <i>Hamlet, </i>II. ii [1088, 1100], Shakespeare twice uses ‘Polack' in ...
... salynde.</i></para> <para>“Might Shakespeare have written ‘studded ...
... dt; studded? —D. Haley in the <i> Shakespeare Quarterly</i> 29 [1978], pp. ...
... 8-9). The 'Greekish lad' is Pyrrhus and Shakespeare drew on this scene for the P ...