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101 to 110 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields

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101) Commentary Note for line 621+6:
621+6 {The pith and marrow of our attribute,}

    ... c>john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>621+6<tab> </tab><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;The best and most valuable part of the praise t ...
102) Commentary Note for line 621+16:
621+16 {Being Natures liuery, or Fortunes starre,}

    ... a><hanging><sc>john1</sc> </hanging><para>621+16<b> <tab> </tab>starre</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;In the old quarto of 1637 it is &#8216;&#8212;< ...

    ... the authors own alteration, omitted in the folios) reads <i>scar</i>, which dr. Johnson thinks more proper. But dr. Johnson did not, perhaps, know, neither does ...

    ... in the folios) reads <i>scar</i>, which dr. Johnson thinks more proper. But dr. Johnson did not, perhaps, know, neither does it appear that mr. Steevens could a ...

    ... g>v1785 = v1778 <i>minus </i><sc>john1</sc>, Riton <i>minus </i>his comments on Johnson and Steevens</hanging><para>621+16<b> starre</b>] <sc>Ritson</sc> (<i>ap ...
103) Commentary Note for line 621+18:
621+18 {As infinite as man may vndergoe,}

    ... >john1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging><para>621+18<tab> </tab><sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;As large as can be accumulated upon man.&#x201D ...

    ... ara>621+18<tab> </tab><b>vndergoe</b>] <sc>Furness</sc> (ed. 1877): &#x201C;<sc>Johnson: </sc>As large as can be accumulated upon man.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> ...
104) Commentary Note for line 621+20:
621+20 {From that particuler fault: the dram of eale}

    ... auy headed reueale</b> <b>east and west</b>] <sc>Theobald </sc>(<i>apud </i><sc>Johnson, </sc>ed. 1765): &#x201C;I do not <small>know</small> a passage, through ...

    ... jectures have been employed about this passage. [quotes Heath and Holt] And Mr. Johnson thinks, that Theobald's reading may stand. I would read <i>Doth all the ...

    ... >N&amp;Q</i></sigla><hanging>Brae: <sc>knt1</sc>; <sc>col1; </sc>Todd's ed. of Johnson's Dictionary</hanging><para>621+20-621+22 <tab> </tab><b>the dram </b>. ...

    ... ery questionable emendation the weight of an acknowledged text. (Vide Todd's <i>Johnson</i>.)</para> <para>&#x201C;Any person who takes the amended passage, as ...

    ... unton [derogate] without attribution, <sc>ktly</sc> [evil] without attribution, Johnson [dictionary] </hanging><para>621+20-621+22<tab> </tab><b>the dram </b>. ...

    ... are synonymous terms, <i>of </i>and <i>by</i> being formerly used, according to Johnson, indifferently as a sign of the ablative. &#8216;To do,' according to th ...

    ... uld be <i>eule</i>&#8212;because the contrast is not between devil and angel as Johnson thought, but between monster and angel, allowing the <i>d</i> word to be ...
105) Commentary Note for line 621+21:
621+21 {Doth all the noble substance of a doubt}

    ... c>1 appendix: Heath +</hanging><para>621+21 <b>Doth</b> . . . <b>doubt</b><sc>] Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765, 8:L12): &#x201C; &#8216;<i>Doth all the noble substance ...

    ... jectures have been employed about this passage. [quotes Heath and Holt] And Mr. Johnson thinks, that Theobald's reading may stand. I would read <i>Doth all the ...

    ... jectures have been employed about this passage. [quotes Heath and Holt] And Mr. Johnson thinks, that Theobald's reading may stand. I would read <i>Doth all the ...

    ... rson singular present tense of the verb <i>to do</i>, which means, according to Johnson, &#8216;to make anything what it is not, and he gives Shakspeare as his ...
106) Commentary Note for line 624:
624 Ham. Angels and Ministers of grace defend vs:

    ... ng>v1773</hanging><para>624-30 <tab> </tab><b>Angels </b>. . . <b>mee</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773): &#x201C;Hamlet's speech to the apparition of his father ...

    ... alls him</i>&#8212;<i>Hamlet, King, Father, Royal Dane: oh! answer me.</i>' <sc>Johnson.</sc>&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn> </cn> <cn> <sigla>1773<tab> </tab><sc>ge ...

    ... <cn> <sigla>1857<tab> </tab><sc>fieb </sc></sigla><hanging><sc>fieb</sc> = <sc>Johnson</sc></hanging><para>624</para></cn> <cn> <sigla>1858<tab> </tab><sc>col3 ...
107) Commentary Note for line 628:
628 Thou com'st in such a questionable shape,

    ... <b>questionable</b>] <sc>Wesley</sc> (1790-, p. 44): &#x201C;I think Hanmer and Johnson right. I am told by those who have seen ghosts, (for I never did myself) ...
108) Commentary Note for line 632:
632 Why thy canoniz'd bones hearsed in death

    ... rb</sc> +</hanging><para>632<tab> </tab><b>canoniz'd</b>. . . <b>death</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;It were too long to examine this note [Warburto ...

    ... tence is this: &#8216;Why dost thou appear, whom we know to be dead"' &#8212;<i>Johnson.</i></para> <para>&#x201C;By the expression &#8216;hearsed in death' is ...

    ... ab> </tab><sc>Furness </sc>(ed. 1877): <sc>Furness</sc> (ed. 1877): &#x201C;<sc>Johnson </sc>has a long note on these lines, called forth by <sc>Warburton'</sc> ...
109) Commentary Note for line 654:
654 I doe not set my life at a {pinnes} <pins> fee,

    ... 773</sigla><hanging>v1773</hanging><para>654<tab> </tab><b>pinnes fee</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773): &#x201C;The value of a pin.&#x201D;</para></cn> <cn><si ...
110) Commentary Note for line 662:
662 Which might depriue your soueraigntie of reason,

    ... ss other places.&#x201D; &lt;/p. 225&gt;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>662<tab> </tab><b>soueraign ...

    ... p. 225&gt;</para></cn> <cn><sigla>1755<tab> </tab>Johnson Dict.</sigla><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>662<tab> </tab><b>soueraigntie</b>]<b> </b><sc>Johnson</s ...

    ... ><hanging>Johnson</hanging><para>662<tab> </tab><b>soueraigntie</b>]<b> </b><sc>Johnson</sc> (1755) does not have <i>sovereignty</i> in the sense of the highest ...

    ... b</sc> +</hanging><para>662 <tab> </tab><b>depriue</b> . . .<b> reason</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;I believe <i>deprive</i> in this place signifie ...

    ... s was not enough, on a passage which it seems almost impossible to mistake, Dr. Johnson and Steevens disagree about the word <i>deprive: </i>the former &#8216;c ...

    ... s, what country rests, What son, what comfort that she (Fortune) can deprive?' Johnson understood the sense of the word, but gave no example of it. Gifford mis ...

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