711 to 720 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... ng>Lectures</hanging><para><sc>3668-73+1<tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...
... ng>Lectures</hanging><para><sc>3668-73+1<tab> </tab>Coleridge </sc>(Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton, Lecture 12, 1812 rept. in John Payne Collier longhand tr ...
... sc> (<i>apud</i> <sc>Rylands</sc>, ed. 1947, Notes): “I think . . . that Shakespeare had come across Seneca's <i>Nihil peris ex tuo tempore, nam quod rel ...
713) Commentary Note for line 3674_367: 3675 {A table prepard, Trumpets, Drums and officers with Cushions,} 3674 {King, Queene, and all the state, Foiles, daggers,}
3674 { and Laertes.}
3674 <Enter King, Queene, Laertes and Lords, with other Atten->
3675 <dants with Foyles, and Gauntlets, a Table and>
3676 <Flagons of Wine on it.>
... ns many of his eminent <i>confreres </i>in medicine, and blots the lesson which Shakespeare intended that Hamlet's life should teach: for “the blow,' he ...
... n, ‘to blame' generally implies ‘but slight censure,' and he quotes Shakespeare to illustrate his opinion. Undoubtedly, Laertes, keenly conscious o ...
... e gauntlets. It is quite possible that the book-keeper had ideas different from Shakespeare about staging the fight, but <sc>Wilson</sc>'s view that F represent ...
... s..forgetten theimselfes..[and] maken all the presence to laughe at theim. 1598 SHAKESPEARE Loves Labours Lost V. ii. 529 Heere is like to be a good presence of ...
... tions, but in the folios the word is <i>mother</i>. The change might be made by Shakespeare after he retired to Stratford, the passage as it originally stood co ...
... d. 1987): “i.e. where my honour is concerned ((<i>OED term sb.</i> 10)). Shakespeare is rather addicted to this periphrastic use of <i>terms of</i>. See, ...
... d. 1987): “i.e. where my honour is concerned ((<i>OED term sb.</i> 10)). Shakespeare is rather addicted to this periphrastic use of <i>terms of</i>. See, ...
... ystems, the validity of a previous decision may be reconsidered by a court.1600 Shakespeare <i>Merchant of Venice</i> IV. i. 217 There is no power in Venice can ...
... he figures, an excellent impersonated satire upon those empty gallants of whom shakespeare saw so many specimens in the fashionable circles of his day.” ...
... ts against any odds, That (in his charge) his lips haue bled with feruor. a1616 SHAKESPEARE <i>As you like It </i> (1623) I. ii. 148 You wil take little delight ...