Read Ebook: A select glossary of English words used formerly in senses different from their present by Trench Richard Chenevix Mayhew A L Anthony Lawson Editor
Font size: Background color: Text color: Add to tbrJar First Page Next PageEbook has 289 lines and 111235 words, and 6 pagesContributor: Anthony Lawson Mayhew A SELECT GLOSSARY SELECT GLOSSARY ENGLISH WORDS USED FORMERLY IN SENSES DIFFERENT FROM THEIR PRESENT ARCHBISHOP 'Res fugiunt, vocabula manent' LONDON KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, & CO., 1 PATERNOSTER SQUARE 1890 PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. In such a decomposition, to be followed by a reconstruction, of some small portions of a great English Classic, matters almost innumerable, and pressing on the attention from every side, would claim to be noticed; but certainly not last nor least the changes in meaning which, on close examination, would be seen to have passed on many of the words employed. It is to point out some of these changes; to suggest how many more there may be, there certainly are, which have not been noticed in these pages; to show how slight and subtle, while yet most real, how easily therefore evading detection, unless constant vigilance is used, these changes often have been; to trace here and there the progressive steps by which the old meaning has been put off, and the new put on, the exact road which a word has travelled; this has been my purpose here; and I have desired by such means to render some small assistance to those who are disposed to regard this as a serviceable discipline in the training of their own minds or the minds of others. And as the words brought forward have been selected with some care, and according to certain rules which have for the most part suggested their selection, so also has it been with the passages adduced in proof of the changes of meaning which they have undergone. A principal value which such a volume as the present can possess, must consist in the happiness with which these have been chosen. Not every passage, which really contains evidence of the assertion made, will for all this serve to be adduced in proof; and this I presently discovered in the many which for one cause or another it was necessary to set aside. There are various excellencies which ought to meet in such passages, but which will not by any means be found in all. In the first place they ought to be such passages as will tell their own story, will prove the point which they are cited to prove, quite independently of the uncited context, to which it will very often happen that many readers cannot, and of those who can, that the larger number will not, refer. They should bear too upon their front that amount of triumphant proof, which will carry conviction not merely to the student who by a careful observation of many like passages, and a previous knowledge of what was a word's prevailing use in the time of the writer, is prepared to receive this conviction, but to him also, to whom all this is presented now for the first time, who has no predisposition to believe, but is disposed rather to be incredulous in the matter. Then, again, they should, if possible, be passages capable of being detached from their context without the necessity of drawing a large amount of this context after them to make them intelligible; like trees which will endure to be transplanted without carrying with them a huge and cumbrous bulk of earth, clinging to their roots. Once more, they should, if possible, be such as have a certain intrinsic worth and value of their own, independent of their value as illustrative of the point in language directly to be proved--some weight of thought, or beauty of expression, merit in short of one kind or other, that so the reader may be making a second gain by the way. I can by no means claim this for all, or nearly all, of mine. Indeed, it would have been absurd to seek it in a book of which the primary aim is quite other than that of bringing together a collection of striking quotations; any merit of this kind must continually be subordinated, and, where needful, wholly sacrificed, to the purposes more immediately in view. Still there will be many citations found in these pages which, while they fulfil the primary intention with which they were quoted, are not wanting also in this secondary worth. In my citations I have throughout acted on the principle that 'Enough is as good as a feast:' and that this same 'Enough,' as the proverb might well be completed, 'is better than a surfeit.' So soon as that earlier meaning, from which our present is a departure, or which once subsisted side by side with our present, however it has now disappeared, has been sufficiently established, I have held my hand, and not brought further quotations in proof. In most cases indeed it has seemed desirable to adduce passages from several authors; without which a suspicion may always remain in the mind, that we are bringing forward the exceptional peculiarity of a single writer, who even in his day stood alone. I suspect that in some, though rare, instances I have adduced exceptional uses of this kind. One value I may claim for my book, that whatever may be wanting to it, it is with the very most trifling exceptions an entirely independent and original collection of passages illustrative of the history of our language. Of my citations, I believe about a thousand in all, I may owe some twenty at the most to existing Dictionaries or Glossaries, to Nares or Johnson or Todd or Richardson. In perhaps some twenty cases more I have lighted upon and selected a passage by one of them selected before, and have not thought it desirable, or have not found it possible, to dismiss this and choose some other in its room. These excepted, the collection is entirely independent of all those which have previously been made; and in a multitude of cases notes uses and meanings of words which have never been noted before. In the present edition the 'Select Glossary' has been carefully revised, and a few of the articles have been rewritten. In the work of revision special attention has been paid to two points, the etymologies and the Middle English quotations. The aim of the editor has been to bring this useful and interesting little book up to date, by purging it of obsolete or doubtful etymologies, and giving those which commend themselves to the best modern authorities on the subject. Nearly all the quotations from the works of Middle English authors have been collated with the best modern editions, and care has been taken to make the references in each case as clear and precise as possible. It is hoped that the Alphabetical Lists of Authors quoted, and of Philological Works referred to, may be found useful to the student. A. L. MAYHEW. The references are to the pages of the 'Select Glossary.' Two dates separated by a hyphen denote the birth and death date of the author; a date preceded by an obelisk denotes the death date; a single date unmarked denotes the date of the work. Adams, Thomas : The Devil's Banquet, 1614. Allestree, Richard : Sermons, 1619-1681. Andrewes, Bp. : Sermons, 1555-1626. Ascham, Roger : Toxophilus, 1545; Schoolmaster , + 1568. Bacon, Francis , 1561-1626. Bale, Bp. : Select Works, 1495-1563. Barnes, Robert : Works, + 1540. Barrow, Isaac : Sermons, 1630-1677. Bates, William : Spiritual Perfection, 1625-1699. Baxter, Richard , 1615-1691. Beaumont and Fletcher ; Beaumont, Francis, 1586-1616; Fletcher, John, 1576-1625. Beaumont, Joseph : Psyche, 1616-1699. Becon, Thomas : Works, 1512-1570. Berners, Juliana : The Book of St. Albans, 1481. Blount, Charles : Philostratus, 1680, 1654-1693. Bolton, Edmund : Hypercritica, fl. 1620. Broughton, Hugh , 1549-1612. Browne, Sir Thomas , 1605-1682. Burke, Edmund , 1729-1797. Burton, Robert : Anatomy of Melancholy, 1576-1640. Butler, Samuel : Hudibras, 1612-1680. Capgrave, John : Chronicle of England, 1460. Cavendish, George : Life of Cardinal Wolsey, + 1562. Caxton, William : Legenda Aurea, + 1491. Chapman, George : translator of Homer, 1557-1634. Chaucer, Geoffrey : The Astrolabe , 1328-1400. Cheke, Sir John : The Gospel of St. Matthew, 1514-1557. Chillingworth, William , 1602-1644. Clarendon, Lord : History of the Rebellion, 1608-1674. Corbet, Richard : Iter Boreale, 1582-1635. Coryat, Thomas : Crudities, 1577-1617. Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page |
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