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1 to 10 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields

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1) Commentary Note for line 1:
The Tragedie of 0{B1r} <nn4v>
H A M L E T
Prince of Denmarke.
1 <Actus Primus. Scœna Prima.> 1.1

    ... sc>warb</sc> without attribution </hanging><para>1<tab> </tab><b>source </b><sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765): &#x201C;This Story is taken from the Danish History of ...
2) Commentary Note for lines 16-17:
16 Bar. Well, good night:
16-17 If you doe meete Horatio and | Marcellus,
17 The riualls of my watch, bid them make hast.

    ... nerally would have <i>all.</i>&#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para><sc>17<tab> </tab></sc><b>r ...

    ... &#x201D; </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para><sc>17<tab> </tab></sc><b>riualls</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ( ...

    ... igla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para><sc>17<tab> </tab></sc><b>riualls</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755), for <i>rivage</i> (Fr.) meaning a bank of a river says &#x2 ...

    ... john1 <i>TGV</i></sc></hanging><para><sc>17<tab> </tab></sc><b>riualls</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765, 1:214 n. 1) on <i>competitor</i> in <i>TGV</i> 2.6.35 (9 ...

    ... </sigla><hanging>v1778 = v1773</hanging><para>17<tab> </tab><b>riualls</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1778, 1:163 n. 3) = v1773. </para> </cn><cn> <sigla>1778<tab> ...

    ... ole, <i>The English Parnassus: Or, A Help to English Poesie</i> (London: Thomas Johnson, 1657). (God) give you good night is the whole form, and Kerrigan's thin ...
3) Commentary Note for line 28:
28 Hora. A peece of him.

    ... c><i>Tmp.</i>: <sc>warb </sc>+</hanging><para>28<tab> </tab><b>A peece</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1773, 1:46 n. 8): &#x201C;For <i>morsel</i> Dr. Warburton read ...

    ... he author might not write <i>morsel</i>, as we say a <i>piece of a man</i>. <sc>Johnson.</sc>&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> </tab><sc>jen</sc></sigl ...
4) Commentary Note for line 38:
38 He may approoue our eyes and speake to it.

    ... prooue our eyes and speake to it. </para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict. </sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>38<tab> </tab><b>approue ...

    ... . </para> </ehline> <cn> <sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict. </sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>38<tab> </tab><b>approue our eyes</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> ( ...

    ... igla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>38<tab> </tab><b>approue our eyes</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): def. 3: &#x201C;To prove; to show; to justify&#x201D;</para ...

    ... anging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>38<tab> </tab><b>approue our eyes</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765): &#x201C;Add a new testimony to that of our eyes.&#x201D ...

    ... to it</b>]: <sc>Jenkins</sc> (ed. 1982) quotes Boswell's biography, which says Johnson is like the ghost in <i>Ham.,</i> who in [1.4, 1.5] and in [3.4] will no ...
5) Commentary Note for line 43:
43 What we {haue two nights} <two Nights haue> seene.

    ... ><sc>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>43<tab> </tab><sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765): &#x201C;This line is by <i>Hanmer</i> given to <i>Marce ...
6) Commentary Note for line 56:
56 Hora. Most like, it {horrowes} <harrowes> me with feare and wonder.

    ... sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cald1</sc>: Steevens on Milton without attribution; <sc>Johnson, </sc>Tyrwhitt<sc>, </sc>+</hanging><para>56<tab> </tab><b>horrowes</b>] ...

    ... raphers are either silent or <small>not</small> at all agreed upon the subject. Johnson [1755?] interprets it here &#8216;disturb, put into commotion:' and thin ...

    ... s &#8216;to turmoile or vexe,' from <i>har</i>, Sax. intorsio, tormentum; while Johnson derives the verb in the sense of beat or break up, and the noun <i>harro ...

    ... of Roger Ascham (in which the dedication and life at least are the work of Dr. Johnson), instead of &#8216;<i>crye out, haroe</i>,' the editor has given &#8216 ...

    ... r ploughing, from <i>Aro</i>, Lat. to plough; which is elucidated by Dr.<i> </i>Johnson [1755?], &#8216;to practice <i>aration.</i>' Interpreting <i>harrow</i> ...

    ... s &#8216;to turmoile or vexe,' from <i>har</i>, Sax. intorsio, tormentum; while Johnson derives the verb in the sense of beat or break up, and the noun <i>harro ...

    ... of Roger Ascham (in which the dedication and life at least are the work of Dr. Johnson), instead of &#8216;<i>crye out, haroe</i>,' the editor has given &#8216 ...

    ... ense, and that there is no idea of referring to <i>haro,</i> a cry of distress. Johnson thought that the word should be written <i>harry, </i>and should have th ...
7) Commentary Note for line 57:
57 Bar. It would be spoke {to} <too>.

    ... &#8776; <sc>del2 </sc>without attribution<sc>; </sc>standard<sc>; &#8776; </sc>Johnson in Boswell without attribution + in magenta underlined</hanging><para>5 ...

    ... 57<tab> </tab><sc>Dowden </sc> (ed. 1899): &#x201C;Compare Boswell's <i>Life of Johnson </i>(ed. Birkbeck Hill, iii. 307): &#x201C;&#8216;Johnson once observed ...

    ... 934): &#x201C;Ghosts could not speak until spoken to. Dowden cites Boswell's <i>Johnson</i> (ed. Birkbeck Hill, iii. 307).&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1980< ...
8) Commentary Note for line 72:
72 Without the sencible and true auouch

    ... C;<sc>Clarendon</sc>: that is, <i>capable of being perceived by the senses</i>. Johnson gives an example of this meaning from Hooker: &#8216;By reason man attai ...
9) Commentary Note for line 78:
78 So frownd he once, when in an angry parle

    ... ed word introduced by Lyly. It occurs in the Mirror for Magistrates. See Todd's Johnson's Dictionary. It is probably as old as the word <i>parlement</i>, which ...
10) Commentary Note for line 79:
79 He smot the {sleaded pollax} <sledded Pollax> on the ice.

    ... l>in magenta underlined</small></hanging><para>79<tab> </tab><b>pollax</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1765): &#x201C;<i>Polack</i> was, in that age, the term for an ...

    ... originary texts in error. He discusses the appearance of the plural form in R. Johnson, <i>Kingdoms and Commonweals </i>(<i>The World, </i>1601), pp. 127, 128; ...
 
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