91 to 100 of 743 Entries from All Files for "shakespeare " in All Fields
... irty years old, Blackstone could charge Shakespeare with a slip of memory.ȁ ...
... ed. 1872): “Ritson suggests that Shakespeare knew of Wittenberg from the ...
... s. . . . And yet as he wrote the play, Shakespeare . . . had also imagined him ...
... : “In the second part of the New Shakespeare Society's <i>Transactions</i ...
... the references to Wittenburg, they show Shakespeare taking some care with local ...
... Danish rowsa'; but the suggestion that Shakespeare uses <i>rouse</i> to give a ...
... ., a work which has been printed by the Shakespeare Society, he does not any whe ...
... n Article X, in the first volume of the Shakespeare Society's Papers, Mr. Halliw ...
... sing Mr. Halliwell's reading to be what Shakespeare intended, but which I cannot ...
... ound, that every fresh idea relating to Shakespeare requires to be amply discuss ...
... elt.'— I cannot help feeling that Shakespeare intended to write <i>too, to ...
... language.</para> <para>“Whatever Shakespeare intended—and I do not ...
... >“I cannot see how any reader of Shakespeare can for one moment suppose, ...
... doubt that this speech is punctuated as Shakespeare intended.”</para></cn ...
... , melting, voluntary death — that Shakespeare follows again in <i>Hamlet.< ...
... at <i>solid </i>was the adjective which Shakespeare had in his original manuscri ...
... loquy. Margaret Webster comments in <i>Shakespeare Without Tears</i> that for s ...
... s of infinite suggestiveness that makes Shakespeare the supreme dramatic artist ...
... peech, it would hardly be surprising if Shakespeare heard the word 'sullied' as ...
... Shakespeare.</i> Journal of the British Shakespeare Association</sigla> <hanging ...
... c prohibition of suicide by Divine Law. Shakespeare may have known the Bible, as ...
... f the suicide of Sir James Hales, which Shakespeare drew on later in the play [3 ...
... 's text of 1723, Theobald comments that Shakespeare 'intended the <i>Injunction< ...
... x201D; Don: He then goes on to say that Shakespeare “must have read this ...
... 1982): “i.e. inherent in nature. Shakespeare recognizes that the weeds ar ...
... see <sc>Schmidt</sc> (<i>Lex.</i>) and Shakespeare <i>passim.</i>”</para ...
... was probably the only circumstance that Shakespeare had in contemplation, when h ...
... ther subservient to their convenience. Shakespeare accepts the same word Posthu ...
... lways represented as a model of beauty. Shakespeare has been followed by Gray in ...
... Hyperion</i> is frequently mentioned by Shakespeare with the accent always on th ...
... </i> 3. 4. 56 (2440)]. Hyperion is by Shakespeare identified with the sun, as ...
... ere and in other plays it is clear that Shakespeare thought the accent was on th ...