This article is an offshoot of work towards an edition of Bel-vedére or The Garden of the Muses, a printed commonplace book published in 1600. The editors’ comprehensive analysis of the origins of the 4,482 one- or two-line passages has resulted in the discovery of thirteen hitherto untraced passages that are based on Shakespeare (and of a fourteenth passage whose Shakespearean origins were discovered by the scholar Charles Crawford in the early twentieth century but not published). These passages and their Shakespearean source texts in Romeo and Juliet, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Richard II, Richard III, Venus and Adonis, and The Rape of Lucrece are discussed here and serve to illustrate the range of adaptive strategies used in the compilation ...
Shakespeare’s poems had very uneven success in the early modern book trade: Venus and Adonis and The...
The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare's Poetry contains thirty-eight original essays written by leading...
"The text ... from MacBeth [v. 31] onwards has been edited by Mr. Walter Raleigh" note in v. 38."Of ...
This article is an offshoot of work towards an edition of Bel-vedére or The Garden of the Muses, a p...
Bel-vedére; or The Garden of the Muses is an early modern printed commonplace book containing an ant...
Anthologizing Shakespeare, 1593–1603 is a reading of Shakespeare’s first decade in print, from Venus...
While Shakespeare may have written solely for the stage, his text has been configured and transforme...
textIf Shakespeare contributed the additions to the 1602 edition of Thomas Kyd's The Spanish tragedy...
Shakespeare’s authorship of a scene in Sir Thomas More has been established as highly probable on th...
Preface signed 1843.With reproductions of original title-pages.v. 1. Greene's Pandosto, the story on...
"American preface" dated Boston 1859, but imprint indicates a later date (after 1868) Contains the s...
In a recent BBC documentary recounting the theft of Shakespeare’s First Folio, the art-thief, Raymon...
Shakespeare's literary heritage consists of poetry and drama. The epics "Venus and Adonis" (1593) an...
by lukas erne and tamsin badcoe Shakespeare’s poems had very uneven success in the early modern book...
Three articles, as Part I, II and III, investigate the relationship between poetry and song in the l...
Shakespeare’s poems had very uneven success in the early modern book trade: Venus and Adonis and The...
The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare's Poetry contains thirty-eight original essays written by leading...
"The text ... from MacBeth [v. 31] onwards has been edited by Mr. Walter Raleigh" note in v. 38."Of ...
This article is an offshoot of work towards an edition of Bel-vedére or The Garden of the Muses, a p...
Bel-vedére; or The Garden of the Muses is an early modern printed commonplace book containing an ant...
Anthologizing Shakespeare, 1593–1603 is a reading of Shakespeare’s first decade in print, from Venus...
While Shakespeare may have written solely for the stage, his text has been configured and transforme...
textIf Shakespeare contributed the additions to the 1602 edition of Thomas Kyd's The Spanish tragedy...
Shakespeare’s authorship of a scene in Sir Thomas More has been established as highly probable on th...
Preface signed 1843.With reproductions of original title-pages.v. 1. Greene's Pandosto, the story on...
"American preface" dated Boston 1859, but imprint indicates a later date (after 1868) Contains the s...
In a recent BBC documentary recounting the theft of Shakespeare’s First Folio, the art-thief, Raymon...
Shakespeare's literary heritage consists of poetry and drama. The epics "Venus and Adonis" (1593) an...
by lukas erne and tamsin badcoe Shakespeare’s poems had very uneven success in the early modern book...
Three articles, as Part I, II and III, investigate the relationship between poetry and song in the l...
Shakespeare’s poems had very uneven success in the early modern book trade: Venus and Adonis and The...
The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare's Poetry contains thirty-eight original essays written by leading...
"The text ... from MacBeth [v. 31] onwards has been edited by Mr. Walter Raleigh" note in v. 38."Of ...