You can find a copy at the related link but you should know that it is a copy from an old VHS tape onto DVD.
Apparently if you find someone that has it, or a school that has it, you are allowed to burn a copy because they no longer distribute it. I am currently looking for someone who has it, as I would love to have a copy! Let me know if you find one! laneylaughlin@Yahoo.com
Yep.If you want to know more about Shakespeare I would HIGHLY HIGHLY recommend 'William Shakespeare - The Pitkin Guide', if you can get your hands on a copy.I have a copy right next to me though, so you can always ask me, if you want.
In the fictitious novel Shakespeare's Scribe by Gary Blackwood, the character Widge, the scribe of the title, says "Because of my skill with a pen, it was my job to copy out the sides, or partial scripts from which each actor learned his lines."
Because Shakespeare put hours and hours of work into creating his own original work. To see someone copy his work word for word, without putting quotations or giving him credit would offend him greatly.
Sonnet XC. Sonnet XVIII. Sonnet XXXV. Sonnet CL. The Sonnets do not have names, only numbers. If you want the content of the various sonnets you will have to read them. The attached link is one place you can do this (also any copy of the Complete Works of Shakespeare)
That is Scott number US 1250. You can purchase a mint copy for forty cents and a used copy for fifteen cents. Consulting a good catalog will help you properly identify the specific stamp and find an estimated value for it.
Leaving aside the issue of which play was Shakespeare's first, I can get a brand new and totally perfect copy of one of Shakespeare's plays, printed last week, for about three bucks.
Yes. If you search for it, you can find a copy on line.
I personally think that he did-- but who know? That was a while...
copy and paste your music onto a track
possibly
You can get a multi-track CD from northpointmusic.org at:
Yep.If you want to know more about Shakespeare I would HIGHLY HIGHLY recommend 'William Shakespeare - The Pitkin Guide', if you can get your hands on a copy.I have a copy right next to me though, so you can always ask me, if you want.
if you contact october films who produced the film for channel 4 you will be able to get yourself a copy
copy cat
You'd have to track down the hospital you got them at and ask for a copy of your records.
What, are you asking whether Shakespeare was invited to a party at Dekker or Heywood's place and dropped over for an ale? Or is it a question of who was Shakespeare's mentor as a budding playwright? If the former, we do not have a copy of Shakespeare's social calendar. If the latter, it is thought that he may have apprenticed with George Peele, perhaps helping him with his play Edward I.
typo?