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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 81) Commentary Note for line 534:534 Take each mans censure, but reserue thy iudgement,... ses “for judgment simply.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson ≈ <sc>warb </sc>+</hanging><para>534 ...
... y.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson ≈ <sc>warb </sc>+</hanging><para>534<tab> </tab><b>censure</b>] <s ...
... hnson ≈ <sc>warb </sc>+</hanging><para>534<tab> </tab><b>censure</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(1755): “2. Judgment; opinion. ‘Madame, and you, my si ...
... igla><hanging><sc>john1</sc> </hanging><para>534<tab> </tab><b>censure</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765, 5: 18 n. †) for <i>2H6 </i>1.3.117 (507): “ ...
... 01D; </para></cn> <cn><sigla>1765-<tab> </tab>mDavies</sigla><hanging>mDavies = Johnson without attribution + in magenta underlined</hanging><para>534<tab> </ta ...
... /tab>Bulloch</sigla><hanging>Bulloch: Staunton (Rowe); Steevens; <sc>col2; </sc>Johnson Dict.</hanging><para>539<tab> </tab><b>chiefe</b>] <sc>Bulloch</sc> (186 ...
... que cast than <i>class</i>, but the latter is the more intelligible; and though Johnson gives no earlier authority for it than Dryden, who was half a century la ...
83) Commentary Note for line 546:546 Farwell, my blessing season this in thee.... sc>john1</sc>: <sc>warb</sc> +</hanging><para>546<tab> </tab><b>season</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “It is more than to <i>infuse</i>, it is to infi ...
... xceeds the sense annexed to it by Dr. Warburton, will hardly extend to what Dr. Johnson states. <small>It is, I believe, only ‘make durable—qualify ...
... n to infuse, it is to infix in such a manner that it must never wear out,' says Johnson. <small>But hear one of the poet's contemporaries:— ‘To seas ...
... er commentary than the <i>conjectures </i>of the learned critics, Warburton and Johnson, could supply. Thus in [920], Polonius says to Reynaldo, ‘You may ...
... an to infuse, it is to infix in such a manner that it may never wear out,' says Johnson. But hear one of the Poet's contemporaries: ‘<i>To season</i>, to ...
... ng><para>548<tab> </tab><b>inuests</b>]</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla> <hanging>Johnson ≈ <sc>theo</sc> without attribution ...
... sts</b>]</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla> <hanging>Johnson ≈ <sc>theo</sc> without attribution</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab> ...
... theo</sc> without attribution</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>inuests</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755): “5. “To inclose; to surround so as to interce ...
... s or provisions: as, the enemy <i>invested</i> the town.”</para><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755) uses ...
... .”</para><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (1755) uses this passages for one of his definitions of <i>tend</i> ...
... .'” </para><hanging>v1773</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>] <sc>Johnson </sc>(ed. 1773): “i.e., your servants are waiting for you. J<sc>o ...
... cn><sigla>1826<tab> </tab><sc>sing1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>sing1</sc> ≈ Johnson without attribution</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>] <sc>Singe ...
... </cn> <cn><sigla>1854<tab> </tab><sc>del2 </sc></sigla><hanging><sc>del2</sc> = Johnson without attribution </hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>] <sc>Deli ...
... igla>1868<tab> </tab><sc>c&mc</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>c&mc</sc>≈ Johnson Dictionary and/or <sc>1773, </sc>partly by way of <sc>sing1,</sc> withou ...
... ord “supposing” is disdainful (and comes from Malone) but OED and Johnson's dictionary confirm. This would, in fact, be the kind of obscure metaph ...
... that Polonius would like to use—as CAPN notes.</para><hanging>v1877 = <sc>Johnson</sc> (1773)</hanging><para>548<tab> </tab><b>tend</b>]</para></cn> <cn>< ...
85) Commentary Note for line 552:552 And you your selfe shall keepe the key of it.... ng><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>552<tab> </tab><b>you</b> . . . <b>it</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “That is, by thinking on you, I shall think on y ...
86) Commentary Note for line 567:567 Pol. Affection, puh, you speake like a greene girle... ing><sc>john:</sc> <i>Oth.</i></hanging><para>567 <tab> </tab><b>green</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765, 8:366) re <i>Oth</i>. 2.1.247. (1028) says that <i>green ...
... er</i>: ‘You'll <i>tender</i> me a fool:' i.e. ‘hold or esteem' <sc>Johnson</sc>.”</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1826<tab> </tab><sc>sing1</sc></sig ...
... t attribution +</hanging><para>574-5<tab> </tab><b>Or</b>. . . <b>thus</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I believe the word <i>wronging</i> has referenc ...
... ty</i>. But <i>wronging</i> seems to be more proper.” </para> <bwk><para>Johnson, in asserting the phrase applied to Ophelia, has the parentheses in the ...
... ng</i>, and gives the following reasons. [quotes <sc>warb, john</sc>] By Dr. <i>Johnson</i>'<i>s</i> method of reasoning the parenthesis should end at <i>phrase ...
... is, the phrase could have been explained without going through contortions, as Johnson had. </para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1774<tab> </tab><sc>capn</sc></sigla><hang ...
... ing</i>, but the word <i>wringing</i> will. — </para> <para>“So in Johnson's Cynthia's Revels, Cupid says of Maria, </p. 375> <p. 376> ...
... . 44): “Warburton is certainly right in this place, and I am afraid that Johnson knew it. He needed not to dig out occasions for contradicting him. They ...
... /cn> <cn> <sigla>1819<tab> </tab><sc>cald1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>cald1: </sc>Johnson; Tooke; Chaucer</hanging><para>574-5<tab> </tab><b>Or</b>. . . <b>thus</ ...
... ra> <para>“Of <i>roam</i> our dictionary makers can give no account. Dr. Johnson pilgrimages to Rome for the etymology of it. It may however, be of the s ...
... b>Wronging</b> <sc> Thompson & Taylor </sc> (ed. 2006): “We follow Johnson and Jennens in adopting Pope's emendation of Q2's 'Wrong' as making bett ...
90) Commentary Note for line 577:577 In honorable fashion.... la><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>577-8<tab> </tab> <b>fashion</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “She uses <i>fashion</i> for <i>manner</i>, and ...
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