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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context ... : maisters you are all welcome,</para> </ehline> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging>1473<tab> </tab>voyce . . . crackt] <sc>johnson</sc> ...
... cn> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sc></sigla><hanging>v1773 = <sc>john1</sc> +</hanging> <para>1473-4 <b>crackt within the ring</b>] STEEVENS (ed ...
253) Commentary Note for lines 1474-7:1475-7 weele | haue a speech straite, come giue vs a tast of your qua|lity,... variant French”</hanging></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging>1475<tab> </tab><b>friendly Fankners</b>] JOHNSON (ed ...
... ging></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn><sigla>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773 = JOHN1 [<i>minus</i> 'but . . . correction'] +</hanging> <para>1475<tab> </tab><b ...
... sc> & <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “full of feeling. Compare King John, ii. 1. 544: 'She is sad and passionate at your highness' tent.' And Two ...
... t was as I receaued </para> </ehline> <cn></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging>1481 <b>cauiary</b>] JOHNSON (ed. 1765): “<i>C ...
... ates were, I suppose, not yet reconciled. “</hanging> <para>[Appendix to JOHN1, p. 198 (App not itself numbered) attributes to Mr. HAWKINS:]<p. 198> ...
... x201D;</hanging></cn> <cn><sigla>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773: = JOHN Appendix [with substitution of “and” for “it”]< ...
... a kind of salt black meat made of roes of fishes, much used in Italy.' In Sir John Harrington's 33rd epigram, we find the word forming four syllables, and acc ...
255) Commentary Note for lines 1493-4:1494 sable Armes,256) Commentary Note for line 1524:1524 A silence in the heauens, the racke stand still,... grace harmony'; <i>Temp.</i> 4.1.207 [(1882)]; <i>Oth.</i>4.2.79. [(2775)]; <i>John, </i>5.1.20. [(2187)]; <i>Son.</i> 102. 10.”</para></cn> <cn></cn> < ...
... heir heads in linnen</i>, &c.</hanging></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1: warb</sc></hanging> <para>1542 <b>mobled Q ...
... c.</hanging></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1: warb</sc></hanging> <para>1542 <b>mobled Queene</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (e ...
... ></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1773<tab> </tab>jen</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>jen = warb + john1</sc></hanging></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1774-79?<tab> </tab>capn</sc></sigla><h ...
... > </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1784<tab> </tab>ays1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>ays1:warb, john, v1773</sc></hanging> <para>1542 <b>mobled</b>] <sc>Ayscough</sc> (ed. 1784 ...
... e and the Cue</F1> for passion</para> </ehline> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1601 <b>the Cue</b>] ...
... /para> </ehline> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1601 <b>the Cue</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): & ...
... cn> <cn><sigla>1773 <tab> </tab> v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773 = <sc>john</sc>1</hanging> </cn> <cn> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1784<tab> </tab><tab> </tab ...
259) Commentary Note for line 1603:1603 And cleaue the generall eare with horrid speech,... erall eare with horrid speech,</para> </ehline> <cn><sigla><sc>1765<tab> </tab>john1</sc></sigla><hanging>1603 <b>the generall eare</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. ...
... <cn><sigla><sc>1773<tab> </tab>v1773</sc></sigla> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>v1773 = john1</sc></sigla> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1882<tab> </tab>elze</sc></sigla><hangin ...
... c>Clark</sc> & <sc>Wright</sc> (ed. 1872): “confound. Compare King John, iv. 2. 137: 'I was amazed Under the tide.' "</para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>18 ...
... >1605 <b>amaze</b>] <sc>Dowden</sc> (ed. 1899): “confound, as in <i>King John</i>, IV. ii. 137.”</para></cn> <cn></cn> <tlnrange>1605</tlnrange></ ...
260) Commentary Note for line 1607:1607 A dull and muddy metteld raskall peake,... r</sc> (1845, p. 235): <p. 235>“There was a corresponding term, <i>John-a-nods;</i> which is used by Harsnet in his <i>Declaration of Popish Impost ...
... net in his <i>Declaration of Popish Impostures</i>, p. 160, ‘a good plain John-a-nods;' a term, it appears, of contempt applied by scholars to the plain s ...
... , which renders it improbable that Shakespeare's text should be corrected to <i>John-a-droynes</i>.”</p. 235></para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1856b<tab> ...
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