1234 examples of shakspeare in sentences

When we think of him as a poet,except in a few of his early compositions,we are not driven to examine what he shares with Chaucer, or Spenser, or Shakspeare, or Milton, or Byron, or Coleridge, or Wordsworth, or any of the poetic masters of literature.

Noble, on the whole, as Shakspeare was, we would not in a mixed company, until after cautious rehearsal, venture to read his comic passages aloud.

It is almost useless to name such sublime masters of it as Dante, Shakspeare, and Milton.

We do not, indeed, compare him with Shakspeare in bulk or force of genius, but only in quality and kind.

This being, in his strange manners and opinions, at least, appears to offer a realization of Shakspeare's idea of Caliban.

" Shakspeare, who loved all things beautiful, and embalmed them so that their lustre could lose nothing at his hands, was never tired of introducing the diamond and the pearl.

Mr. Harrington himself is the commanding intellect of the story, perhaps because of his belief in the greatest number of heresies,being somewhat peculiar in his religious views, believing in woman's rights, considering the marriage ceremony a silly concession to popular prejudice, giving credence to omens, active as an Abolitionist, andto crown allholding that Lord Bacon wrote Shakspeare's Plays!

Here you see the Shakspeare House as it was,wedged in between, and joined to, the "Swan and Maidenhead" Tavern and a mean and dilapidated brick building, not much worse than itself, however.

But this, after all, is Christ's temple, not Shakspeare's.

Of the many striking things that Henry Ward Beecher has said, nothing, perhaps, is more impressive than his account of his partaking of the communion at that altar in the church where Shakspeare rests.

A memory more divine than his overshadowed the place, and he thought of Shakspeare, "as he thought of ten thousand things, without the least disturbance of his devotion," though he was kneeling directly over the poet's dust.

Come, we are full of Shakspeare; let us go up among the hills and see where another poet lived and lies.

Who is that gentleman in the shiny hat on the sidewalk in front of the Shakspeare house?

So, too, in watching the aquarium itself, we shall see endless repetitions of those "sea-changes" which Shakspeare sang.

" SHAKSPEARE.

We doubt if posterity owe a greater debt to any two men living in 1623 than to the two obscure actors who in that year published the first folio edition of Shakspeare's plays.

But are we to believe them when they assert that they present to us the plays which they reprinted from stolen and surreptitious copies "cured and perfect of their limbs," and those which are original in their edition "absolute in their numbers as he [Shakspeare] conceived them"?

If a double allowance of vituline brains deserve such honor, there are few commentators on Shakspeare that would have gone afoot, and the trumpets of Messieurs Heminge and Condell call up in our minds too many monstrous and deformed associations.

Even in these cases it is not safe to conclude that all or even any of the variations were made by the hand of Shakspeare himself.

The probability is small that a writer so busy as Shakspeare must have been during his productive period should have copied out their parts for the actors, himself, or that one so indifferent as he seems to have been to the mere literary fortunes of his works should have given any great care to the correction of such copies, if made by others.

"Measure for Measure" is an example of this, and we are not satisfied with being told that its ruggedness of verse is intentional, or that its obscurity is due to the fact that Shakspeare grew more elliptical in his style as he grew older.

Of sheep, Shakspeare has used the regular plural: "Two hot sheeps, marry!"Love's Labour Lost, Act ii, Sc.

The following line from Shakspeare appears to be still more elliptical: "Poor and content is rich, and rich enough.

"Shakspeare. OBS.

" Beauties of Shakspeare, p. 278.

1234 examples of  shakspeare  in sentences