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161 to 170 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields

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161) Commentary Note for line 1211:
1211 Ham. Excellent <excellent> well, you are a Fishmonger.

    ... rnicator, an old <i>fishmonger</i>.' Whiter (apud Furness) gives a passage from Johnson's Masque at Christmas (vol. vii. P. 227, ed. Gifford), where Venus says ...

    ... maketh the Fishmongers' wives so wanton and beautiful.' Whiter notices that in Johnson's <i>Masque of Christmas</i>, Venus, as a tire woman, says, &#8216;I am ...

    ... s</i>, Venus, as a tire woman, says, &#8216;I am a fishmonger's daughter.' Does Johnson only mean sea-born, or mean wanton and beautiful? Joubert ( Secondie par ...
162) Commentary Note for lines 1218-19:
1218-9 Ham. For if the sunne breede maggots in a dead dogge, | being a

    ... /para></cn> <cn><sigla>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773 = <sc>warb + johnson</sc></hanging></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1774<tab> </tab>capn</sc></sigla><han ...

    ... n</b>] <sc>Ayscough</sc> (ed. 1784): &#x201C;Dr. Warburton's comment (which Dr. Johnson says almost sets the critic on a level with the author) on this passage ...
163) Commentary Note for lines 1219-20:
1219-20 good kissing carrion. | Haue you a daughter?

    ... g><sc>john1 = warb</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;This is a noble emendation, which almost sets t ...

    ... st sets the critick on a level with the authour. &#x201C; [Note in Yale ed. of Johnson's Works: In the 1st ed. this note is printed on a leaf which is a cancel ...

    ... <cn><sigla>1790<tab> </tab>MAL </sigla><hanging><sc>mal : warburton, steevens, johnson</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Malone</sc> ...

    ... rion</i>, that it seems to <i>kiss</i>.'</para> <para>&#x201C;In justice to Dr. Johnson, I should add, that the high elogium which he has pronounced on Dr. Warb ...

    ... >, that it seems to <i>kiss</i>.&#x201D;</para> <para>&#x201C;In justice to Dr. Johnson, I should add, that the high elogium which he has pronounced on Dr. Warb ...

    ... reader.<tab> </tab>[Quotes WARB and JOHN1]</para> <para>&#x201C;The wish of Dr. Johnson, expressed upon other comments of this writer, would not have been out o ...

    ... cn><sigla><sc>1826<tab> </tab>sing1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>sing1 : warburton, johnson, malone</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Sin ...

    ... hey <i>think</i>.' This emendation, and the moral comment on it, delighted Dr. Johnson, who says &#8216;that is almost sets the critic on a level with the auth ...

    ... <sigla>1841<tab> </tab><sc>knt</sc>1 (nd)</sigla><hanging><sc>knt1 : warburton, johnson</sc></hanging> <para>1219-20 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Knight</ ...

    ... of the quartos and the folios. We fear that this &#8216;noble emendation,' as Johnson calls it, cannot be sustained by what follows. The carrion is good at k ...

    ... <cn><sigla><sc>1843<tab> </tab>col1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>col1 : warburton, johnson, coleridge</sc></hanging> <para>1219-20 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] ...

    ... ssing carrion.</b>] <sc>Collier</sc> (ed. 1843): &#x201C;Warburton's note, and Johnson's eulogy of it, seem to have led most subsequent editors from the old te ...

    ... la>1856<tab> </tab><sc>hud</sc>1 (1851-6)</sigla><hanging><sc>hud1 : warburton, johnson, coleridge, malone</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</ ...

    ... on,' and supported the change with a long comment which, in the opinion of Dr. Johnson, 'almost sets the critic on a level with the author!' The critic remark ...

    ... cn><sigla><sc>1857<tab> </tab>dyce1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>dyce1 : warburton, johnson, whiter, coleridge, caldecott, knight,</sc> DELIUS</hanging> <para>1219 ...

    ... kissing carrion.' &#8212;I give Warburton's emendation,which, if overpraised by Johnson (who called it a "noble" one), at least had the merit of conveying somet ...

    ... sigla><sc>1872<tab> </tab><tab> </tab>cln1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cln1: warb, johnson, malone</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Cla ...

    ... olios have 'good kissing carrion.' Warburton first proposed the change, which Johnson calls 'a noble emendation.' There can be little doubt of its truth. ...

    ... </sc></sigla><hanging><sc>bulloch : malone, whiter, staunton. hanmer., mitford, johnson</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b>] <sc>Bulloch</sc ...

    ... /i> god'. My Staunton is of opinion that Hamlet <i>reads </i>from a book. Dr. Johnson was so well pleased with Warburton's emendation, that he says it &#8216; ...

    ... tab>ard1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard1 : caldecott, corson, furness, warburton, johnson, malone, staunton</sc></hanging> <para>1219 <b>good kissing carrion.</b ...

    ... for kissing. But much might be said on behalf of Warburton's emendation, which Johnson accepted with an outbreak of admiration-god kissing; compare &#8216;comm ...

    ... more appropriate to Ham.'s mood than Warburton's &#8216;noble emmendatian,' as Johnson called it. Cf. note [(1222-3)].&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1934<t ...

    ... ara> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1982<tab> </tab>ard2</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ard2 : johnson, corson, bowers, warburton</sc></hanging> <para>1218-19 <sc>Jenkins </sc ...

    ... 19 <sc>Jenkins </sc>(ed. 1982): "The sense, correctly understood by Raleigh (<i>Johnson on Shakespeare</i>, p. XXV) and well explained by Corson (quoted in Furn ...

    ... erness of comment. Warburton's famous emendation <i>god</i>, though called by Johnson a 'noble emendation', still occasionally resuscitated by otherwise reput ...
164) Commentary Note for lines 1295-7:
1295 < Ham. Why then 'tis none to you; for there is nothing>
1296 <either good or bad, but thinking makes it so: to me it is>
1297 <a prison.>

    ... wretch or happy' ; Donne, <i>The Progress of the Soul</i>, ll. 518-20 ; Robt. Johnson, <i>Essays</i> (1601, BIv), 'All worldly happiness hath his being only ...
165) Commentary Note for line 1302:
1302 <I haue bad dreames.>

    ... a printer's error&#8212;read &#8216;had dreams,' a &#8216;noble emendation,' as Johnson might have called it, attained probably by accident.&#x201D;</para></cn> ...
166) Commentary Note for lines 1304-5:
1304 <very substance of the Ambitious, is meerely the shadow>
1305 <of a Dreame.>

    ... </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para> 1304-5 <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed, 1765): <i>&#x201C;Shakespeare</i> has accidentally inverted a ...
167) Commentary Note for lines 1309-12:
1309 < Ham. Then are our Beggers bodies; and our Mo->
1310 <narchs and out-stretcht Heroes the Beggers Shadowes:> 1310
1311 <shall wee to th'Court: for, by my fey I cannot rea->
1312 <son?>

    ... nging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para> 1309-10 <b>Then ... Shadowes</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed, 1765): &#x201C;<i>Shakespeare </i>seems here to design a rid ...

    ... ness consist in poverty.&#x201D;</para> <para> 1311-12 <b>reason</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765) in <i>King John<b><i> </i></b></i>(3.480n2) says that: & ...

    ... ch mighty space with their ambition, but the shadows of the beggar's dreams.' Johnson thought that Shakespeare designed &#8216;a ridicule of those declamation ...

    ... such mighty space with their ambition, but the shadows of the beggars' dreams.--Johnson."</para> <para> 1311<b> by my fey</b>] <sc>Hudson</sc> (ed. 1856): " ...
168) Commentary Note for lines 1369-70:
1369-70 his part in | peace, <the Clowne shall make those laugh whose lungs>

    ... c>john1 = warb +</sc></hanging> <para>1370-1 <b>the Clowne...a'th'sere</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;This passage I have omitted, for the same reas ...
169) Commentary Note for lines 1372-3:
1372-3 {black} <blanke> verse shall hault for't. What players | are they?

    ... la><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1371-2 <b>the Lady...for't</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed, 1765): &#x201C;The lady shall have no obstruction, unless from ...
170) Commentary Note for lines 1379-80:
1379-80 Ros. I thinke their inhibition, comes by the meanes |of the late

    ... b>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773</hanging> <para>1379-80 <b>I...innouasion</b>]<sc>Johnson</sc> (ed, 1773): &#x201C;I fancy this is transposed: Hamlet inquires not ...

    ... act is in that behalf appointed. This circumstance is equally repugnant to Dr. Johnson's transposition of the text, and to Mr. Stevens's explanation of it as i ...

    ... act is in that behalf appointed.' This circumstance is equally repugnant to Dr. Johnson's transposition of the text, and to Mr. Steevens's explanation of it as ...

    ... ct is in that behalf appointed.This statute, if alluded to, is repugnant to Dr. Johnson's transcription of the text, and to Mr. Steevens explanation of it as it ...

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