201 to 210 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... erity </sc> (ed. 1904): “used by Shakespeare of the orbits of the stars.& ...
... uch is the old form of the word, and so Shakespeare always has it. It is commonl ...
... : “Many of the words employed by Shakespeare and his contemporaries were ...
... ion of eternity. It may be however that Shakespeare uses ‘eternal' for  ...
... ernity. But ‘eternal} was used by Shakespeare as an adjective expressing a ...
... teries of eternity. Schmidt notes that Shakespeare sometimes uses <i>eternal</i ...
... ating to the realm of the supernatural. Shakespeare often associates the word wi ...
... ill after the 39 <i>Eliz.</i> 1597. (<i>Shakespeare </i>then 33,) when the first ...
... ould at best be a hard one. . . . [but] Shakespeare does not develop [the] polit ...
... es 714-17]. </p. 20><p. 21> Shakespeare employs here—not by ac ...
... n of speed at all, but the reverse. For Shakespeare with a touch of an irony tha ...
... is stronger than my Faith. I doubt that Shakespeare had Warburton's ideas in his ...
... ark is an impediment, not a release. So Shakespeare interposes the retarding pol ...
... ross the river. As <i>the fat weed</i> Shakespeare may have had in mind asphode ...
... image is one of torpor. <i>Dull</i> in Shakespeare is often applied to sleep (c ...
... rgics, </i> 1: 78) is surely imaginary. Shakespeare need have had no particular ...
... t clear which, if any, ‘fat weed' Shakespeare has in mind. The asphodel, ...
... [3756], appears to have been written by Shakespeare solely to provoke recollecti ...
... ng wood, on the wood of the wharf where Shakespeare imagined Charon's boat to ar ...
... 2.213 (926)], appears to be peculiar to Shakespeare (<i>OED sb.</i>1 2c)."</para ...
... ssary, <sc>Verity</sc> says, “in Shakespeare commonly if not always =  ...
... <i>Hastings</i>,—]] I believe <i>Shakespeare </i>wrote. ‘<i>Th</i>' ...
... mean 'corrupted' in a more general way; Shakespeare uses it in its literal sense ...