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Line 354 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 0-1017 ed. Bernice W. Kliman
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
354 Mar. My good Lord.
1995 Graham-White
Graham-White
354 Graham-White (1995, pp. 79, 165 n. 15):<p. 79> “Graham-White says of the anonymous A Pleasant Commodie Called Looke about You, published in 1600 by Edward Allde, “Almost any . . . punctuation mark, even a period, . . . can indicate an interruption.” </p. 79> He also states that<p. 165 n. 15> “Unusual punctuation at the ends of speeches is not confined to commas marking interruptions.” He lists from Marston’s Parasitaster (1606) the following marks “to indicate an interruption, either of another speaker or of a speaker’s own chain of thought within a speech: a comma, a semi-colon, two colons, no punctuation at all, and a period followed by a dash . . . . The dash, for which all these stand, was only at this time coming into use.” </165 n. 15>