Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage

I want to begin by quoting one of Dr Johnson’s notes on Hamlet, a passage that, though entirely characteristic, may be less than familiar to many. Johnson is commenting on the punctuation of a passage and is concerned about a sequence of dashes towards the end of the play: To a literary friend of m...

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Main Author: Peter Hollland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina 2005-01-01
Series:Ilha do Desterro
Online Access:https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/7312
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author Peter Hollland
author_facet Peter Hollland
author_sort Peter Hollland
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description I want to begin by quoting one of Dr Johnson’s notes on Hamlet, a passage that, though entirely characteristic, may be less than familiar to many. Johnson is commenting on the punctuation of a passage and is concerned about a sequence of dashes towards the end of the play: To a literary friend of mine I am indebted for the following very acute observation: “Throughout this play,” says he, “there is nothing more beautiful than these dashes; by their gradual elongation, they distinctly mark the balbuciation and the increasing difficulty of utterance observable in a dying man.” To which let me add, that, although dashes are in frequent use with our tragic poets, yet they are seldom introduced with so good an effect as in the present instance. (qtd. in Wells 1: 69) Johnson’s reliance on others—and their cloaked identity—is something we are used to. So too Johnson’s yearning here both to generalize about tragic practice and to praise the particular local effect in Shakespeare can be paralleled frequently elsewhere.
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spelling doaj-art-4d94a413d2a84214a31b0e4c8f3fd19d2025-08-20T03:44:06ZengUniversidade Federal de Santa CatarinaIlha do Desterro0101-48462175-80262005-01-0149Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stagePeter HolllandI want to begin by quoting one of Dr Johnson’s notes on Hamlet, a passage that, though entirely characteristic, may be less than familiar to many. Johnson is commenting on the punctuation of a passage and is concerned about a sequence of dashes towards the end of the play: To a literary friend of mine I am indebted for the following very acute observation: “Throughout this play,” says he, “there is nothing more beautiful than these dashes; by their gradual elongation, they distinctly mark the balbuciation and the increasing difficulty of utterance observable in a dying man.” To which let me add, that, although dashes are in frequent use with our tragic poets, yet they are seldom introduced with so good an effect as in the present instance. (qtd. in Wells 1: 69) Johnson’s reliance on others—and their cloaked identity—is something we are used to. So too Johnson’s yearning here both to generalize about tragic practice and to praise the particular local effect in Shakespeare can be paralleled frequently elsewhere.https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/7312
spellingShingle Peter Hollland
Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
Ilha do Desterro
title Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
title_full Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
title_fullStr Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
title_full_unstemmed Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
title_short Editing for performance: Dr Johnson and the stage
title_sort editing for performance dr johnson and the stage
url https://periodicos.ufsc.br/index.php/desterro/article/view/7312
work_keys_str_mv AT peterhollland editingforperformancedrjohnsonandthestage