<< Prev     1.. [21] 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ..55     Next >>

201 to 210 of 540 Entries from All Files for "johnson" in All Fields

Contract Context Printing 80 characters of context... Expand Context
201) Commentary Note for line 1704:
1704 Is not more ougly to the thing that helps it,
    ... >JOHN1</para> <para>1704 <b>to</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;That is ...
202) Commentary Note for line 1710:
1710 Ham. To be, or not to be, that is the question,
    ... /hanging> <para>1710-42<tab> </tab> <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;Of this ...
    ... </hanging> <para>1710-42<tab> </tab><sc>Johnson</sc> (<i>apud</i>  ed. 1773):  & ...
    ... ):  &#x201C;I cannot but think that Dr. Johnson's explication of this passage, t ...
    ... <i>Hamlet's</i> reasoning, which Dr. <i>Johnson</i> has so well explained, is su ...
    ... <sc>Malone</sc> (ed. 1790): &#x201C;Dr. Johnson's explication of the first five  ...
    ... ;If to die, were to sleep,' &amp;c. Dr. Johnson has marked out with his usual ac ...
    ... sc> (ms. notes 1790, p.45): &#x201C;Dr. Johnson's explanation is preferable in m ...
    ... he remainder of the soliloquy. (M. says Johnson has &#8216;well explained' this  ...
    ... .) &#8216;Explained' is the wrong word. Johnson has paraphrased the speech well, ...
    ... ng of explanation;  and here, as far as Johnson appears to us to have correctly  ...
    ... n</sc> (ed. 1899): &#x201C;Explained by Johnson as a future life, or non-existen ...
    ...  supply what Hamlet himself does not.   Johnson's famous observation that the sp ...
    ... '</i>, pp. 74-80).   Most commentators, Johnson among them, have found it perfec ...
    ... de to what Hamlet actually says.   When Johnson begins his paraphrase, '<i>Befor ...
    ... sforms 'the question' altogether.   Yet Johnson's other addition - 'Before I can ...
    ... rked on.  Indeed Malone, who castigated Johnson's 'wrong' beginning, appears to  ...
    ...  only to Hamlet (i. 26).   Others, from Johnson to Kenneth Muir (<i>Hamlet</i>,  ...
203) Commentary Note for line 1713:
1713 Or to take Armes against a sea of troubles,
    ... <b> against a sea of troubles</b>]  <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765):  &#x201C;Mr. Po ...
    ... s of metaphor).  It is strange that Dr. Johnson should excuse a man's talking no ...
    ... Caldecott</sc> (ed. 1832): &#x201C;Here Johnson, who not unfrequently took alarm ...
    ... a>&lt;p. 41&gt; It is singular that Dr. Johnson, in his note to Hamlet's soliloq ...
    ... as follows:&#8212;</para> <para>[quotes Johnson]</para> <para>On this comment, M ...
204) Commentary Note for lines 1714-15:
1714 And by opposing, end them, to die to sleepe
1715 No more, and by a sleepe, to say we end
    ... In the accurate editions of Capell, and Johnson, Steevens and Reed, this grammat ...
    ... a> <para>The explanatory comment of Dr. Johnson, on this celebrated philosophica ...
    ... f the text as given in Capell's, and in Johnson's editions.</para> <para>The ell ...
205) Commentary Note for line 1721:
1721 When we haue shuffled off this mortall coyle
    ... Ado &amp;c pge. 39. Tempest pge. 11. B. Johnson. v. 2. pge. 442.&#x201D;</para>< ...
    ... ish tongue William Warburton and Samuel Johnson and asked them what they underst ...
206) Commentary Note for line 1724:
1724 For who would beare the whips and scornes of time,
    ... ngues</i>, col. 597.  So used by <i>Ben Johnson, Cynthia's Revels</i>, act. ii.  ...
    ...  <para>1724 <b>For . . . time</b>]  <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765):  &#x201C;I doub ...
    ... ara> <para>1724 <b>For . . . time</b>]  JOHNSON (ed. 1773): &#x201C;I doubt whet ...
    ... famy.  <i>Quips</i>, the word which Dr. Johnson would introduce, is derived, by  ...
    ...  Human Life is Subject, without, as Dr. Johnson well observes, remembering those ...
    ... understood by our two last Editors. Dr. Johnson thinks that Whips and Scorns are ...
    ... famy.  <i>Quips</i>, the word which Dr. Johnson would introduce, is derived, by  ...
    ... ression with our old writers.  Thus Ben Johnson's Every Man Out of his Humour: & ...
    ... #x201C;The conjectures of Warburton, Dr Johnson, &amp;c. have done no more than  ...
207) Commentary Note for line 1731:
1731 To grunt and sweat vnder a wearie life,
    ... para>1731<tab> </tab> <b>grunt</b>] <sc>Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;All the ...
    ... /b>] RITSON (1783, p. 200): &#x201C;Dr. Johnson is for or against Shakspeares ow ...
    ... rafyed (how do your ears bear that, dr. Johnson?) and frittered away, by his fri ...
    ...  to the present age preferable: and Dr. Johnson was of the same opinion. See his ...
    ...  declared to be the true reading by Dr. Johnson, in his edition 1765, Vol. VIII. ...
    ... rs, the history of our language, as Dr. Johnson has justly observed, will soon b ...
    ...  to the present age preferable; and Dr. Johnson was of the same opinion. See his ...
    ... y Chaucer and others.'</para> <para>Dr. Johnson's note in act. iv. is, I find, a ...
    ... ll the old copies; &#8216;although,' as Johnson observes, &#8216;it can scarcely ...
208) Commentary Note for line 1743:
1743 The faire Ophelia, Nimph in thy orizons
    ... <sc>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1743 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;This is ...
    ... ab>Davies </sc>(1765-): &#x201C;Here Dr Johnson observes is a touch of Nature, o ...
    ... ies</sc> (1784, p. 78): "This, says Dr. Johnson, is a touch of nature; for Hamle ...
    ... that Ham. speaks ironically, and not as Johnson maintained in &#8216;grave and s ...
209) Commentary Note for lines 1762-3:
1762-3 Ham. That if you be honest & faire, {you} <your Honesty> | should admit
    ... c>john1</sc></hanging> <para><sc>1762-3 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): [reads &#x201C; ...
    ... yond doubt that this reading is wrong.  Johnson says that the folio reads, &#821 ...
    ... with her;' which is the very sense that Johnson contends for, and expressed with ...
    ... r;&#x201D; which is the very sense that Johnson contends for, and expressed with ...
    ... y is to have honey a sauce to sugar.'   Johnson proposed to read here, 'You shou ...
210) Commentary Note for lines 1779-81:
1779-80 very proude, reuengefull, ambitious, with more offences at my beck,
1781-2 then I haue thoughts to put them in, imagination to giue them shape,
1779-81
    ... /tab>john1</sc></sigla><para><sc>1781-2 Johnson</sc> (ed. 1765): &#x201C;That is ...

<< Previous Results

Next Results >>


All Files Commentary Notes
Material Textual Notes Immaterial Textual Notes
Surrounding Context
Range of Proximity searches