721 to 730 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... ords. In the Cranach <i>Hamlet</i> and in my Introduction to an edition for the Shakespeare Association of Silve's <i>Paradoxes of Defence</i> (pp. xiv=xv) I su ...
... lizabeth's reign (in the year 1579) for the length of swords and daggers, which Shakespeare might probably allude to. See Strype's Annals of Queen Elizabeth , v ...
... hanging>Furnivall</hanging><para>3732 <b>union</b>] <sc>Furnivall</sc> (<i>New Shakespeare Society's Transactions 1877-9</i>, p.106): <p. 106> “Se ...
... the appearance of an ‘e', while if, as we have seen frequently happened, Shakespeare did not count his minim-strokes and wrote four instead of three mini ...
... a pearl </i>is that told of Cleopatra (Holland's Pliny, ix. 35). Another which Shakespeare presumably knew is that of Sir Thomas Greshman, who was fabled to ha ...
... <sc>Edelman</sc> (2000), discussing <i>chamber</i>: “As most students of Shakespeare know, on 29 June 1613, the Globe burned to the ground when, as Sir H ...
... of his figure, to appear with propriety in the two former of these characters, Shakespeare might have put this observation into the mouth of her majesty, to ap ...
... of breath</b>] <sc>Goethe</sc> (1796; rpt. 1989, 5:6:185): “Do you think Shakespeare thought about such things as that?</para> <para>“I don't find ...
... e thereby falls into sweat. The editors want to point out in this section that Shakespeare lends a hand not to the apparent foundation here of Hamlet's ‘ ...
... b>] <sc>Rylands</sc> (ed. 1947, Notes): “It is ludicrous to suppose that Shakespeare is referring to the increasing corpulence of his tragic actor Richar ...
... his own in exchange ((Marshall, p. 200; <i>Punch</i>, 1875, p. 255; Sprague, <i>Shakespeare and the Actors</i>, pp. 179-80)). Any regular theatre-goer is likely ...
... nd treacherous attack on a Hamlet who is off his guard, their normal purpose in Shakespeare is to serve as a warning to an opponent that he is about to be attac ...
... or the entry before [3839], which most eds. delete. But if an editor is to help Shakespeare out, he should not remove a clearly purposed entry but contrive an u ...
... being at the centre of a theatre-performance, is discussed by Anne Righter, <i>Shakespeare and the Idea of the Play</i>, 1962, at the end of Ch. 6.”</pa ...
... 1D;[In the courage to die, Horatio [is] like the old Romans, from whose history Shakespeare knew such examples of suicide.]</para></cn> <cn> <sigla><sc>1867 <ta ...
... this later corruption. The explanation, we have seen1, of that misprint is that Shakespeare employed the not uncommon spelling ‘leue' for ‘liue', a ...