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Line 1354-5 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1354-5 paragon of Annimales; and yet to me, what is | this Quintessence of 
1766- mwar2
mwar2
1354 paragon of Annimales] Warner (1766-70): “Paragon i.e. vid. Skinner ad voc. the Paragon of Animals i.e. a Pattern for all other Animals to Copy after. So Spenser, Fairy Queen. so Tempest, pge. 21.”
1770 Gentleman
Gentleman
1342-54 I...Annimales] Gentleman (1770, pp. 20-21): “In the foregoing passage we have as concise and beautiful a delineation of human nature as thought can conceive or words express; and the immediate transition to mention of the players, who, though seemingly intruders are material agents for the plot, is excellently contrived by the author; since Hamlet, </p. 20><p. 21> as we may justly suppose from his proceedings, immediately suggests that use for the Actors in that profession, which soon after he makes of them.” </p. 21>
1872 cln1
cln1
1354 paragon] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): "Cotgrave renders the French word by ’A paragon, or peerlesse one; the perfection, or flower of; the most complete, most absolute, most excellent peece, in any kind whatsoeuer.’ Compare Two Gentlemen of Verona, ii. 4. 146 : ’ She is an earthly paragon.’ "
1355 Quintessence] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “a term in alchemy, signifying the subtle essence which remained after the four elements, earth, air, fire, and water, had been removed from any substance. The word occurs again in As You Like It, iii. 2. 147."
1355 Quintessence] Wright (1877, AYL n.3.2.128): “The fifth essence, called also by the mediæval philosophers the spirit or soul of the world, ‘whome we terme the quinticense, because he doth not consist of the foure Elementes, but is a certaine fifth, a thing above them or beside them . . . This spirit doubtlesse is in a manner such in the body of the world, as ours is in mans body: For as the powers of our soule, are thought the spirit giuen to the members: so the vertue of the soule of ye world is by the quintecense spread over all, for nothing is found in all the world which warmeth the sparke of his vertue’”start here and get the reference.
1877 clns
clns
1354 paragon] Neil (ed. 1877): “the peerless among, the most perfect of.”
1354 1355