_ G
NOTES
The present edition includes whatever has been considered of value
in the notes of preceding editions.
NOTES
The present edition includes whatever has been considered of value
in the notes of preceding editions.
Ben Jonson - The Devil's Association
' after line 6 1692 om.
1716 W, G
The Epilogue.
_Thus, the_ Proiecter, _here, is ouer-throwne.
But I have now a_ Proiect _of mine owne,
If it may pa? ? e: that no man would inuite
The_ Poet _from vs, to ? up forth to night, 5
If the_ play _plea? e. If it di? plea? ant be,
We doe pre? ume, that no man will: nor wee. _
[868] 1 'The Epilogue. ' om. G
[869] 7 [_Exeunt.
_ G
NOTES
The present edition includes whatever has been considered of value
in the notes of preceding editions. It has been the intention in
all cases to acknowledge facts and suggestions borrowed from such
sources, whether quoted verbatim, abridged, or developed. Notes
signed W. are from Whalley, G. from Gifford, C. from Cunningham.
For other abbreviations the Bibliography should be consulted.
Explanations of words and phrases are usually found only in the
Glossary. References to this play are by act, scene, and line of the
Text; other plays of Jonson are cited from the Gifford-Cunningham
edition of 1875. The references are to play, volume and page.
TITLE-PAGE.
=THE DIUELL IS AN ASSE. = 'Schlegel, seizing with great felicity upon
an untranslateable German idiom, called the play _Der dumme Teufel_
[Schlegel's _Werke_, ed. Bocking, 6. 340]--a title which must be
allowed to be twice as good as that of the English original. The
phrase 'the Devil is an ass' appears to have been proverbial.
The Epilogue.
_Thus, the_ Proiecter, _here, is ouer-throwne.
But I have now a_ Proiect _of mine owne,
If it may pa? ? e: that no man would inuite
The_ Poet _from vs, to ? up forth to night, 5
If the_ play _plea? e. If it di? plea? ant be,
We doe pre? ume, that no man will: nor wee. _
[868] 1 'The Epilogue. ' om. G
[869] 7 [_Exeunt.
_ G
NOTES
The present edition includes whatever has been considered of value
in the notes of preceding editions. It has been the intention in
all cases to acknowledge facts and suggestions borrowed from such
sources, whether quoted verbatim, abridged, or developed. Notes
signed W. are from Whalley, G. from Gifford, C. from Cunningham.
For other abbreviations the Bibliography should be consulted.
Explanations of words and phrases are usually found only in the
Glossary. References to this play are by act, scene, and line of the
Text; other plays of Jonson are cited from the Gifford-Cunningham
edition of 1875. The references are to play, volume and page.
TITLE-PAGE.
=THE DIUELL IS AN ASSE. = 'Schlegel, seizing with great felicity upon
an untranslateable German idiom, called the play _Der dumme Teufel_
[Schlegel's _Werke_, ed. Bocking, 6. 340]--a title which must be
allowed to be twice as good as that of the English original. The
phrase 'the Devil is an ass' appears to have been proverbial.