Q1 ૨૧ NOTES ABBREVIATIONS Abbott's Shakespearian Grammar, 3d edition. First Folio (1623) of Shakespeare's plays. Third Folio (1663 and 1664). Fourth Folio (1685). A New English Dictionary, ed. Murray. The two Quartos. Sh. Gloss. A Shakespeare Glossary, ed. Onions. The following editors are referred to frequently in the body of the notes: N. Rowe (1709, 2d ed. 1714), A. Pope (1723, 2d ed. 1728), L. Theobald (1733, 2d ed. 1740), Sir T. Hanmer (1744), W. Warburton (1747), E. Capell (1760), Dr. Johnson (1765, etc.), E. Malone (1790, etc.), G. Steevens (1793, etc.), C. Knight (1840). J. P. Collier (1842, 2d ed. 1858), J. O. Halliwell (1855), S. W. Singer (1856), A. Dyce (1857, 2d ed. 1866, 3d ed. 1875), H. Staunton (1857), R. G. White (1858, 2d ed. 1883), W. G. Clark and W. A. Wright [Camb. ed.] (1863, 2d ed. 1891), T. Keightley (1864), Clark and Wright [Globe edition] (1864), H. H. Furness [New Variorum] (1904), H. C. Hart (1906). There will also be found frequent references to the following dictionaries: Jehan Palsgrave, L'Esclaircissement de la Langue Francoyse (1530, reprinted 1852); J. Florio, His firste Fruites (1578), Worlde of Wordes (1598), Queen Anna's New World of Words (1611); J. Baret, An Alvearie or Quadruple Dictionarie (1580); R. Cotgrave, Dictionarie of the French and English Tongues (1611); R. Nares, Glossary (1822); A. Schmidt, Shakespeare-Lexicon (1874). For the meaning of words not given in these notes, the student is referred to the Glossary at the end of the volume. The numbering of the lines corresponds to that of the Globe edition: this applies also to the scenes in prose. |