Links to other Shakespeare sites
Search sites
First
Folio of Shakespeare at the University of Chicago
(USA)
Full-text searching of their First Folio
text, with a few extras such as searching within genres and proximity
searches.
First
Web Folio Edition at shakespeare.com
Only offers simple keyword searching. Texts
based on the Complete
Moby Shakespeare edition.
The
Oxford Shakespeare (1914) at Bartleby.com
Includes line numbering and keyword searching.
Also has notes for non-modern words and word usage.
Shakespeare
Internet Editions at the University of Victoria
(Canada)
Original spelling, line numbering embedded
in text. Includes multiple editions of the texts.
The
Works of the Bard at the University of Sydney
(Australia)
Over a decade old, and still the most powerful
free search apparatus on the Internet. Many of the features on Open Source
Shakespeare are duplications of the
search engine; in many ways, when OSS is complete, it will be an enhancement
of TWOTB's existing features in a more user-friendly packaging. Its main
problem is the arcane search syntax, which few will take the time to master.
Commercial sites
The management does not endorse any of these
sites; they are presented for comparison. That means we're trying to show
you what you get on this site for free.
Chadwyck-Healey
Editions and Adaptations of Shakespeare
This informational page shows how you could
search the Chadwyck-Healey collection — assuming your institution
subscribes to it.
Shakespeare
Database Project
Outdated and apparently under-developed,
the Shakespeare Database Project is nevertheless the most ambitious compilation
of Shakespeare's plays. (See the database's complexity for
yourself.) Not being a philologist, I am unfamiliar with many of the
terms they use, but I gather that every word in the texts is parsed and
categorized a zillion different ways.
Text collections
Complete
Moby Shakespeare at MIT
Public domain HTML versions of the plays,
but no poems. There's a note on the site saying, "The poetry and
other services, including the search engine and forums, will return shortly,"
but visitors might be skeptical because the note is dated November 13,
2000.
First
Folio facsimile: Schoenberg Center for Electronic Text & Image
Exactly what it sounds like: facsimile images
of the First Folio.
Gutenberg
Project
Many, many Shakespeare texts, free for personal
use. Some are even in German. (Scroll down to see Gutenberg's complete
list of Shakespeare's works.)
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