671 to 680 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... sly is so now; and Shakespeare, and not Shakespeare alone, is witness that it wa ...
... he note of abruption & disjunction. Shakespeare had it perhaps in his mind t ...
... a joint <i>landmark </i> ,' &c. <i> Shakespeare Vindicated </i> , &c. p. ...
... > [Here, Dyce clearly uses Singer's <i>Shakespeare Vindicated</i> but to contr ...
... he note of abruption & disjunction. Shakespeare had it perhaps in his mind t ...
... <cn> <sigla>1853<tab> </tab>Singer (<i>Shakespeare Vindicated</i>)</sigla><hang ...
... sies of people in dividing their lands. Shakespeare has the <i> mered </i> quest ...
... e a joint <i>landmark </i>,' &c. <i>Shakespeare Vindicated </i>, &c. p. ...
... ma' is aa typographical slip than that Shakespeare should have chosen that poin ...
... e occasion, and not to be discovered in Shakespeare or elsewhere; secondly, it i ...
... k, however, that in the present passage Shakespeare uses the word in a different ...
... hich the word ‘co-mate' occurs in Shakespeare it is accented on the second ...
... ay militates against the supposition of Shakespeare having used it, for in much ...
... In the three other only instances where Shakespeare applied the word, it is done ...
... and calmly' are very often employed by Shakespeare in various senses of course. ...
... ul. <sc>Staunton</sc>'s suggestion that Shakespeare may have written <i>co-mate< ...
... omma' is a typographical slip than that Shakespeare should have chosen that poin ...
... <i>certainty</i> the actual word which Shakespeare inserted. Let it be granted& ...
... 16;peace,' if not to the members of the Shakespeare Societies, at any rate to th ...
... Societies, at any rate to the ghost of Shakespeare and to the text.</p. 319& ...
... the Danish sword</i> ((IV.3.62-3)), and Shakespeare could hardly have been ignor ...
... a ‘harmonious connection' (<i>The Shakespeare Key </i>, p. 443n.); Dowden ...
... An ein Wortspiel mit 'as' und 'ass' hat Shakespeare wohl kaum gedacht, wiewohl s ...
... helia may be perhaps accounted for from Shakespeare thinking of the novel and / ...
... ronical punishment. It is possible that Shakespeare meant to mark, as strongly a ...
... einertes Abbild.' [ <i>Model</i> is for Shakespeare often an image/likeness, nam ...
... from the Latin cognate <i>modulus</i>, Shakespeare modified from the process of ...
... a perfecter modell than thou art? 1597 SHAKESPEARE Richard II I. ii. 28 Thou do ...
... elf of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern (as Shakespeare was to call them) by a neat ...
... mplain.—These are things in which Shakespeare knows no jesting, because he ...
... e Folio . . . it seems very likely that Shakespeare revised this passage. If so ...
... enquiring whether it was right or wrong Shakespeare was aware that the Criticks ...
... ne retrograde Be froward opposyt. a1616 SHAKESPEARE Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) V. v. ...