The Shakspere Allusion-book: A Collection of Allusions to Shakspere from 1591 to 1700, Volume 1Clement Mansfield Ingleby, Lucy Toulmin Smith, Frederick James Furnivall, John James Munro H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1932 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 91
Page xxxvi
... Shakspere's , probably from no other similar com- position in the world , have so many phrases been borrowed , and of no other , probably , have so many passages and scenes been imitated . It is difficult to determine which plays after ...
... Shakspere's , probably from no other similar com- position in the world , have so many phrases been borrowed , and of no other , probably , have so many passages and scenes been imitated . It is difficult to determine which plays after ...
Page xliv
... Shakspere's immortality . The poet is anxious to dissociate his encomiums from the sort of thing which " seeliest ... Shakspere's works you may know Shakspere the man . And he records the delight that Elizabeth and James derived from his ...
... Shakspere's immortality . The poet is anxious to dissociate his encomiums from the sort of thing which " seeliest ... Shakspere's works you may know Shakspere the man . And he records the delight that Elizabeth and James derived from his ...
Page 39
... Shakspere , remarking that ' He that can trot a Courser ' appears to refer to Shakspere's horse- holding days , and ' his glorious scutchion ' to his grant of arms . The horse - holding is a tradition that comes through Pope , Rowe ...
... Shakspere , remarking that ' He that can trot a Courser ' appears to refer to Shakspere's horse- holding days , and ' his glorious scutchion ' to his grant of arms . The horse - holding is a tradition that comes through Pope , Rowe ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
A. B. Grosart ALLN Allusion-Books allusions Beaumont Ben Jonson beſt borrowings Collier Comedy copy criticism death doth Dryden Dyce edition English extract Falstaff fame felfe fhall firſt Fletcher Folio fome fuch Grosart Hamlet hath haue Henry Henry IV Heywood honour imitated Iohn J. P. Collier James Shirley John Marston Jonson Julius Cæsar King Lady lines London Lord loue Lucrece Malone Massinger Merry moſt muſt night Notes and Queries Oldcastle Othello passage Philip Massinger phrase play Players Playes Poems poet praiſe prefixed Prince printed Quarto Queen quoted reference Reprinted Richard Richard III Robert Romeo and Juliet says scene ſee Shakspere Shakspere's ſhall ſhould Sir John Sonnets ſpeake Stage stanza thee theſe Thomas Thomas Heywood thoſe thou Tragedy unto Venus and Adonis verses vpon whofe whoſe William Shakespeare words write written