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311 to 320 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields

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311) Commentary Note for line 2544+1:
2544+1 {That monster custome, who all sence doth eate}

    ... nging><para>2544+1-2544+2<tab> </tab><sc>[Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8: 245): &#x201C;That monster custom, who all sense ...

    ... <i>monster</i>, and <i>evil habits</i> to <i>actions fair and good</i>. I wish Johnson had explained the passage, and shewn how any meaning could be extracted ...

    ... , is angel yet in this</i>.</para> <para>&#x201C;I prefer this reading; but Dr. Johnson seems confirmed in opinion that an opposition was meant between <i>angel ...

    ... n proposed by Dr. Thirlby, &#8216;habits evil,' seems entitled to adoption. Dr. Johnson objects to it on the ground that it destroys the antithesis between <i>d ...

    ... llowed by <sc>Singer</sc> (ed. 2) and <sc>White</sc>, <sc>Ed</sc></small>.] <sc>Johnson</sc>: I think Thirlby's conjecture wrong; <i>angel</i> and <i>devil</i> ...

    ... reads &#8216;eat, Of habits' devil'; Grant White, &#8216;eat of habit's evil'; Johnson, &#8216;eat of habits, devil.' Clar. Press notes: &#8216;The double mean ...

    ... equently resisted is due to the attractiveness of an antithesis (insisted on by Johnson) between <i>devil</i> and <i>angel</i>. Yet this seeming justification f ...

    ... his &#8211; to interpret Q2 as it stands involve some wrenching of the syntax. Johnson, with a comma after <i>habits</i>, makes <i>devil</i> parenthetic; more ...

    ... ustom who is a monster.&#x201D;</para> <br/><hanging><sc>ard3q2</sc>: Theobald, Johnson, Hibbard, Jenkins</hanging> <para>2544+1-2<tab> </tab>who. . . devil] <s ...

    ... wicked or devilish practices. Theobald and many editors emend devil to 'evil'; Johnson and others defend devil because of the antithesis with angel. Hibbard (w ...
312) Commentary Note for line 2544+2:
2544+2 {Of habits deuill, is angell yet in this}

    ... sc>+ <i>contra</i> Thirlby</hanging> <para>2544+2<tab> </tab><b>deuill</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc>(ed. 1765): &#x201C;I think <i>Thirlby</i>'s conjecture wrong, thoug ...

    ... be easy (v. MSH. pp. 320-1), especially as the compositor, like all edd. since Johnson, may have been misled by the supposed antithesis between &#8216;devil' a ...
313) Commentary Note for line 2547:
2547 And when you are desirous to be blest,

    ... ed Crimes had plunged her into.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1772<tab> </tab>Johnson (<i>SJC</i>)</sigla><hanging>Johnson (<i>SJC</i>)</hanging> <para>2547-8 ...

    ... D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1772<tab> </tab>Johnson (<i>SJC</i>)</sigla><hanging>Johnson (<i>SJC</i>)</hanging> <para>2547-8<tab> </tab><b>And </b>. . .<b> you</ ...

    ... SJC</i>)</hanging> <para>2547-8<tab> </tab><b>And </b>. . .<b> you</b>] <sc>Ben Johnson</sc> (<i>St. James's Chronicle</i>, No. 1836, Nov.19-21: 4): &#x201C;In ...
314) Commentary Note for line 2550:
2550 To punish me with this, and this with me, {I4v}

    ... #8216;To punish <i>him</i> with <i>me</i>, and <i>me</i> with <i>him'</i>], Dr. Johnson tells us, is Hanmer's reading; the other editions have it, &#8216;To pun ...

    ... of Hanmer's, which the editors have injudiciously adopted. The old editions, as Johnson informs us, agree in reading &#8216;To punish me with this, and this wit ...
315) Commentary Note for line 2558:
2558 Let the {blowt} <blunt> King temp't you againe to bed,

    ... .&#x201D; Folios 1623, and 1632.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2558<tab> </tab><b> ...

    ... 2.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2558<tab> </tab><b> bloat </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ...

    ... gla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2558<tab> </tab><b> bloat </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): &#x201C;to swell or make turgid with wind.&#x201D;</para></ ...

    ... . . . To <i>bloat</i>, now means to swell up, and comes probably from blow (<i>Johnson</i>); and to this we must perhaps refer the &#8216;<i>bloat</i> king' in ...

    ... ed. 1857): &#x201C;To <i>bloat </i>means to swell up, and comes probably, as <i>Johnson</i> supposes, from <i>blow</i>; to this we must refer this word <i>bloat ...
316) Commentary Note for line 2559:
2559 Pinch wanton on your cheeke, call you his Mouse,

    ... e patinet.' &#8216;Muss,' corrupted from &#8216;mouse,' occurs several times in Johnson's Every Man in his Humour, 2.1</small>.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...
317) Commentary Note for line 2560:
2560 And let him for a paire of reechie kisses, 2560

    ... /i> with gore' in <i>Macbeth</i>. </fnc></para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2560<tab> </tab><b> ...

    ... i>. </fnc></para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2560<tab> </tab><b> reechy </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ...

    ... la><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2560<tab> </tab><b> reechy </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): [from <i>reech</i>, corruptly formed from <i>reek</i>] &#x2 ...

    ... 60<tab> </tab><b>reechie kisses</b>] <sc>[Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8: 246): &#x201C;kisses from one whose breath smell ...
318) Commentary Note for line 2566:
2566 Would from a paddack, from a bat, a gib,

    ... </sigla><hanging><sc>han2 = han1</sc></hanging></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. &#8776; <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <pa ...

    ... n1</sc></hanging></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. &#8776; <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> paddack ...

    ... t. &#8776; <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> paddack </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): &#x201C;a great frog or toad.&#x201D;</para><hanging>Johnso ...

    ... ] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): &#x201C;a great frog or toad.&#x201D;</para><hanging>Johnson Dict. &#8776; <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> gib </b ...

    ... Dict. &#8776; <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> gib </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): &#x201C;any old worn-out animal.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> ...
319) Commentary Note for line 2571:
2571 To try conclusions in the basket creepe,

    ... b> </tab><tab> </tab><tab> </tab><tab> </tab></para> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla> <hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2571<tab> </tab><b ...

    ... b><tab> </tab></para> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla> <hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2571<tab> </tab><b> conclusions </b>] <sc>Johnson ...

    ... anging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2571<tab> </tab><b> conclusions </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): 1. &#x201C;determination; final decision;&#x201D;</para> <p ...

    ... </cn> <cn> <sigla>1771<tab> </tab><sc>han3</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>han3: </sc>Johnson</hanging> <para>2571<tab> </tab><b>conclusions</b>] <sc>Hanmer</sc> (ed. ...
320) Commentary Note for line 2577+2:
2577+2 {Whom I will trust as I will Adders fang'd,}

    ... john2 = pope1 +</sc></hanging><para>2577+2<tab> </tab><b>Adders fang'd</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;That is, Adders with their <i>fangs</i>, or <i> ...

    ... </b>] S<sc>eymour</sc> (1805, p. 191): &#x201C;This certainly will admit of Dr. Johnson's interpretation, adders, with their fangs or teeth undrawn: but I rathe ...

    ... 7+2<tab> </tab><b>Adders fang'd</b>] <sc>Caldecott</sc> (ed. 1819): &#x201C;Dr. Johnson says, with their fangs or poisonous teeth, undrawn. It has been the prac ...

    ... ntidotes by playing with vipers, but they first disabled their fangs [this from Johnson]. But it may be, that Hamlet meant that he extended his distrust of the ...

    ... undrawn, furnished with teeth. It has been the practice of mountebanks, says <i>Johnson</i>, to boast the efficacy of their antidotes by playing with vipers, bu ...

    ... <para>2577+2<tab> </tab><b>fang'd</b>] <sc>Furness (</sc>ed. 1877): &#x201C;<sc>Johnson</sc>: Adders with their fangs, or poisonous teeth, undrawn. <sc>Seymour< ...

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