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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... nging><para>2544+1-2544+2<tab> </tab><sc>[Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8: 245): “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>“I prefer this reading; but Dr. Johnson seems confirmed in opinion that an opposition was meant between <i>angel ...
... n proposed by Dr. Thirlby, ‘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 ‘eat, Of habits' devil'; Grant White, ‘eat of habit's evil'; Johnson, ‘eat of habits, devil.' Clar. Press notes: ‘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 – 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.”</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 ...
... sc>+ <i>contra</i> Thirlby</hanging> <para>2544+2<tab> </tab><b>deuill</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc>(ed. 1765): “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 ‘devil' a ...
313) Commentary Note for line 2547:2547 And when you are desirous to be blest,... ed Crimes had plunged her into.”</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): “In ...
... #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, ‘To pun ...
... of Hanmer's, which the editors have injudiciously adopted. The old editions, as Johnson informs us, agree in reading ‘To punish me with this, and this wit ...
... .” Folios 1623, and 1632.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. </hanging> <para>2558<tab> </tab><b> ...
... 2.”</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): “to swell or make turgid with wind.”</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 ‘<i>bloat</i> king' in ...
... ed. 1857): “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.' ‘Muss,' corrupted from ‘mouse,' occurs several times in Johnson's Every Man in his Humour, 2.1</small>.”</para></cn> <cn> <sigla> ...
... /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>]  ...
... 60<tab> </tab><b>reechie kisses</b>] <sc>[Davies]</sc> (ms. notes <i>in</i> <sc>Johnson</sc>, ed. 1765, opp. 8: 246): “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. ≈ <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <pa ...
... n1</sc></hanging></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson Dict. ≈ <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> paddack ...
... t. ≈ <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> paddack </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): “a great frog or toad.”</para><hanging>Johnso ...
... ] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): “a great frog or toad.”</para><hanging>Johnson Dict. ≈ <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> gib </b ...
... Dict. ≈ <sc>han2</sc> </hanging> <para>2566<tab> </tab><b> gib </b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): “any old worn-out animal.”</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. “determination; final decision;”</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. ...
... john2 = pope1 +</sc></hanging><para>2577+2<tab> </tab><b>Adders fang'd</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “That is, Adders with their <i>fangs</i>, or <i> ...
... </b>] S<sc>eymour</sc> (1805, p. 191): “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): “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): “<sc>Johnson</sc>: Adders with their fangs, or poisonous teeth, undrawn. <sc>Seymour< ...
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