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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... 5<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1920 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “According to the doctrine of the four humours, ...
222) Commentary Note for line 1924:1924 In my harts core, I in my hart of hart... >1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1924 Johnson (ed. 1765; cross-reference to <i>Ham</i> 5.386 [H8, 1.2.1 “My lif ...
... ;My life itself, and the best heart of it”]): Disagreeing with WARB, <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) says “This expression is not more monstrous than ...
... nging><sc>john1</sc>: standard</hanging> <para><sc>1935 </sc><b>stithy</b><sc>] Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “<i>Stithy </i>is a smith's <i>anvil.</i>” ...
224) Commentary Note for line 1953:1953 Ham. No, nor mine now my Lord.... 5<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1953 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “A man's words, says the proverb, are his own no ...
225) Commentary Note for line 1962:1962 Ros. I my Lord, they stay vpon your patience.... 5<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1962 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “May it not be read more intelligible [sic], <i> ...
... 201C;i.e. ‘they <i>wait </i>upon your <i>sufferance </i>or <i>will.' </i> Johnson would have changed the word to <i>pleasure</i>; but Shakespeare has agai ...
... 851-6): "That is, they <i>wait</i> upon your <i>sufference</i> or <i>will</i>. Johnson would have changed the word to <i>pleasure</i>; but Shakespeare ahs it i ...
... 5<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1970 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I think we must read, <i>Do you think, I meant ...
... g> <para>1970 <b>country matters</b>] <sc>Ayscough</sc> (ed. 1784): “Dr. Johnson thinks we must read, <i>Do you think I meant country </i>manners? Do you ...
... ou thinke I meant country matters?</b>] <sc>Malone</sc> (ed. 1790): “Dr. Johnson, from a casual inadvertence, proposed to read—country <i>manners</ ...
... anging> <para>1970 <b>country matters</b>] <sc>Elze</sc> (ed. 1882): “Dr Johnson's conjecture ‘manners' seems to be countenanced by the following p ...
... <b>country matters</b>] <sc>Dowden</sc> (ed. 1899): “rustic proceedings. Johnson conjectured country manners, as in <i>King John</i>, 1. I. 156. I suspec ...
227) Commentary Note for lines 1983-85:1984-5 sute of sables; ô heauens, die two mo|nths agoe, and not forgotten yet,... hanging><sc>john1 = warb +</sc></hanging> <para>1984 <b>sute of sables</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I know not why our editors should, with such im ...
... a country where it was bitter cold, and the air was nipping and eager,' (as Dr. Johnson supposed,) nor because ‘a suit of sables was the richest dress tha ...
... s passage, I think the poem meant to make Hamlet talk incoherently. Though Dr. Johnson tells us in a note that “he supposes it is well enough known that ...
... <para>1984 <b>sute of sables</b>] <sc> Becket</sc> (1815, p. 51): “When Johnson thus exclaims against the ‘implacable anger,' as he calls it, of c ...
... ving <i>persecuted his fellows</i>, one might almost be led to imagine, had not Johnson been a lexicographer, that he knew not precisely the meaning of the expr ...
... es the black colour in gentlemen's arms' — quoted in Dr R. G. Latham's <i>Johnson's Dictionary</i>.”</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1881<tab ...
... . 1899): “Warburton read, ‘‘fore I'll have a suit of sable.' Johnson observed that the fur of sables is not black; a suit trimmed with sables ...
... could have thought of something gayer; and it is rather absurd for critics from Johnson to Dover Wilson, to have insisted that sables are not black but brown - ...
228) Commentary Note for lines 1991-92:{her,}<She kneeles, and makes shew of Protestation vnto>... </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1 = theo1 + </sc></hanging> <para><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I have left this as I found it, because the qu ...
... gly</i>, without any mention of <i>regal coronets.</i>”</para> <para><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765 Appendix [unattributed]): “<i>Regal coronets</i> ...
... ab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1 = warb+</sc></hanging> <para><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I think <i>Hanmer</i>'s exposition most likely ...
... ching</i> for <i>malechor</i>, and even then it will be harsh.</para> <para><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) [note for “micher” in <i>1H4 </i>(4.167n6 ...
230) Commentary Note for line 2024:2024 King. Full thirtie times hath Phebus cart gone round... ab><b>Full thirtie times</b>]<b> </b>[<sc>Davies</sc>] (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8:222): “ ‘Full thirty times,' &c. ...
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