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Contract Context Printing 160 characters of context... Expand Context 171) Commentary Note for line 1380:1380 innouasion.... a><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1380 <b>the late innouasion</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I fancy this is transposed: <i>Hamlet </i>enqu ...
172) Commentary Note for lines 1386-7:1387 <Yases, that crye out on the top of question; and>... </b>] <sc>Roberts</sc> (1729, pp. 20-2): <p. 20> “It appears by <i>Johnson's Drama's</i>, that from the Year 1600 to 1609 he [Nathan Field] was amo ...
... ging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1386-7 <b>little Yases...question</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “The meaning seems to be, they ask a common ques ...
... hey were applauded improperly, and in the wrong Place.</para> <para>“Mr. Johnson thinks the Meaning of this crying out at the Top of Question to be, thei ...
... recite in the highest notes of voice that can be uttered.' But both he and Dr. Johnson understand question as conversation, dialogue, asking a common question, ...
... uestion,' citing <i>Hamlet</i> passage as analogue: ‘<i>Question</i>, in Johnson's Dictionary, is defined ‘examination by torture.' ‘Such a p ...
... recite in the highest notes of voice that can be uttered.' But both he and Dr. Johnson understand <i>question</i> as conversation, dialogue, asking a common qu ...
... >' = common <i>players</i>— they are so termed in the next speech. So Ben Johnson, <i>The just Indignation of the Author</i>,— ‘The <i>stagers ...
173) Commentary Note for line 1393:<How are they escoted? Will they pursue the Quality no>... /sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1393 <b>Will...Quality</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “Will they follow the <i>profession</i> of pla ...
... [“paid”]</hanging> <para> 1393 <b>Will...Quality</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773): “Will they follow the <i>profession</i> of play ...
... b>v1778</sigla><hanging>v1778</hanging> <para> 1393 <b>escoted</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed 1778): “Paid. From the French <i>escot</i>, a shot or r ...
... > <cn><sigla><sc>1843<tab> </tab>col1</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>col1 = v1778 + : johnson </sc></hanging> <para>1393 <b>escoted</b>] <sc>Collier</sc> (ed. 1843): ...
... ra>1393 <b>escoted</b>] <sc>Collier</sc> (ed. 1843): “<i>Paid,</i> says Johnson. From the French <i>escot</i>, a <i>shot</i> or <i>reckoning. </i>We h ...
... /para></cn> <cn><sigla><sc>1885<tab> </tab>macd</sc></sigla><hanging><sc>macd : johnson</sc></hanging> <para>1393 <b>escoted</b>] <sc>MacDonald</sc> (ed. 1885) ...
... 01C;<i>paid</i>—from the French <i>escot</i>, a shot or reckoning: <i>Dr. Johnson.</i>”</para> <para> </para> <para><sc>macd : standard</sc ...
174) Commentary Note for lines 1400-2:1401 <trouersie. There was for a while, no mony bid for argu->1402 <ment, vnlesse the Poet and the Player went to Cuffes in>... 3<tab> </tab>v1773</sigla><hanging>v1773</hanging> <para>1400 <b>tarre</b>]<sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773): “To provoke any animal to rage, is ‘to tar ...
... <hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1409 <b>It is not very strange</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “I do not wonder that the new players have so su ...
... f the city were not so followed as they used to be: [see p. 265, n. 6.] but Dr. Johnson's explanation is certainly just, and this passage connects sufficiently ...
... nging>v1773 </hanging> <para> 1419 <b>let me comply with you</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773): Hanmer reads, <i>Let me</i> compliment <i>with you</i> ...
... > </tab>v1785</sigla><hanging>1419 <b>let mee comply with you in this garb</b>] JOHNSON (ed. 1785): “Hanmer reads, <i>Let me</i> compliment <i>with you< ...
178) Commentary Note for line 1441:1441 Ham. Buz, buz.... </sigla> </cn> <cn><sigla><sc>john1</sc></sigla><hanging>1441 <b>Buz, buz</b>] JOHNSON (ed, 1765):: “Meer idle talk, the <i>buzze</i> of the vulgar.&#x ...
... igla><hanging>v<sc>1773 = john1</sc></hanging> <para>1441 <b>Buz, buz</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1773)::<b> </b>“Mere idle talk, the <i>buz</i> of the v ...
... is, therefore, probable from the answer of Polonius, that buz was used, as Dr. Johnson supposes, for an idle rumour without any foundation. In B. Jonson's Stap ...
... erefore, probable from the answer of Polonius, that <i>buz</i> was used, as Dr. Johnson supposes, for an idle rumour without any foundation. In Ben Jonson's <i ...
... erefore, probable from the answer of Polonius, that <i>buz</i> was used, as Dr. Johnson supposes, for an idle rumour without any foundation. In Ben Jonson's <i ...
... nd in Two Noble Kinsmen, iii. 5. 79 (ed. Littledale, p. 55). Elze notes that in Johnson's Staple of News the collector of mercantile intelligence is called Emis ...
... sc></sigla><hanging><sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para>1443 <b>Then . . . Asse</b>] JOHNSON (ed. 1765): “This seems to be a line of a ballad.”</para>< ...
... came each Actor on his Asse</b>.] RITSON (1783, p. 197): “This, says Dr. Johnson, <i>seems</i> to be a line of an old ballad. He has, therefor, caused it ...
... /hanging> <para>1449 <b>the lawe of writ, and the liberty</b>]<tab> </tab> <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): “All the modern editions have, <i>the law of </i ...
... /hanging> <para>1449 <b>the lawe of writ, and the liberty</b>]<tab></tab> <sc> Johnson</sc> (ed 1773): “All the modern editions have, <i>the law of </i ...
... /sc> (ed. 1886): “<i>‘Writ' </i>for <i>writing, composition.'</i> JOHNSON.--- ‘(The) <i>law of writ and the liberty'</i>mean pieces written ...
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