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Line 1874-76 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1874-5 full laugh, cannot but make the iudicious greeue, the | censure of 
1875-6 <the> which one, must in your allowance ore-|weigh a whole Theater of o- 
1780 mals
Malone (p.355): "Ben Jonson seems to have imitated this passage in his Poetaster, 1601; ‘---I will try / If tragedy have a more kind aspect; /Her favours in my next I will pursue; / Where if I prove the pleasure but of one, / If he judicious be, he shall be alone /A theatre unto me.’
1785 v1785
v1785 = mals
1785 mason
1874-5 or 1875-6 Mason (1785, p. 387): “The meaning is, ‘the censure of one of which,’ and probably that should be the reading also;-- the present reading, though intelligible, is very licentious, especially in prose.”
1791- rann
rann
1875 of which one] Rann (ed. 1791-): “—of one of which.”
1793 v1793
M. Mason [V1793]: The meaning is, “the censure of one of which,” and probably that should be the reading also. The present reading, though intelligible, is very licentious, especially in prose.
Malone [V1793]: In your approbation. See Vol. XIV. p. Xxx [unreadable], n. 3.
1819 cald1
CALDECOTT (ed. 1819): “By your admission preponderate, &c. The text is in the spelling of the quartos. The folio of 1632 reads ore-sway. Mr. Malone observes, Ben Jonson seems to have imitated this passage in his Poetaster, 1601.
1826 sing1
1875-6 Singer (ed. 1826): “i.e. approval, estimation. Vide King Lear, [2.04.183 (1470)].”
1856 hud1 (1851-6)
allowance] "That is, approval, estimation."
1870 abbott
1876-7 Abbott (§300): “Be is much more common with the plural than the singular. Be is also used to refer to a number of persons, considered not individually, but as a kind or class. ‘O, there be players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and that highly, that,’ &c.”
1872 cln1
cln1
1874 censure] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): judgment, as in i. 3. 69.”
1875 the which one] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): "So the folios. The quartos omit ’the.’ Whichever reading we follow, it must mean ’the judicious man singly.’ "
1877 clns
clns
1875-6 one . . . . a whole Theater] Neil (ed. 1877): Ben Jonson’s Poetaster, 1601, supplies this reference: ‘If I prove the pleasure but of one, So he judicious be, he shall be alone A theatre unto me’ — Epilogue, 15 from end.”
1881 hud2
1875-6 Hudson (ed. 1881): “‘The censure of the which one’ means the judgemet of one of which, or of wisdom. This use of censure is very frequent.”
1875-6 Hudson (ed. 1881): “Allowance is estimation or approval. To approve is the more frequent meaning of to allow, in Shakespeare. And so in the Bible; as, ‘The Lord alloweth the righteous.’”
1885 macd
macd
1875-6 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “ ‘and the judgment of such a one.’ ‘the which’ seems equivalent to and—such.”
1875-6 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “ ‘must, you will grant,’”
1899 ard1
1875. censure] Dowden (ed. 1899): “judgement, as in 1. Iii. 69.”
1934a cam3
1875-6 Wilson (ed. 1934): “The singular suggests reference to a special patron. Southampton, who is known to have frequented plays assiduously in 1599, was in the Tower after Feb. 1601.”
1985 fisher
fisher
1876 Theater] Fisher (1985, p. 5): “The first occurrence is in 1374 as ‘theatre’. By 1550 the spelling had become ‘theater’. The word occurs six times in F of 1623, five times as ‘theater’, once as ‘theatre’. In the documents quoted by Chambers regarding the playhouses the spelling ‘theater’ is used in 80 of the 100-odd occurrences of the word, including those in the documents from the Burbages, who built the Theater. In England the spelling changed from ‘theater’ to ‘theatre’ about 1720. In America ‘theater’ is general.”
1874 1875 1876