 | Ashley Montagu - Swearing - 2001 - 388 pages
...every word that he considered improper. In 1818 appeared his ten-volume The Family Shakespeare, "In which nothing is added to the original text; but those...cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." The verb "to bowdlerize" was a very active one during this century, and Dr. Bowdler's example was widely... | |
 | Ebenezer Cobham Brewer - Allusions - 2001 - 1166 pages
...expurgate a book. Thomas Bowdler, in 1818, gave to the world an edition of Shakespeare's works " in which nothing is added to the original text ; but...cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." This was in ten volumes. Bowdler subsequently treated Gibbon's Decline and Fall in the same way. Hence... | |
 | Elizabeth O'Neill - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2001 - 241 pages
...Dr. Thomas Bowdler, who in 1818 published an edition of Shakespeare's works in which, as he said, " those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." Sometimes a badly-dressed or peculiar-looking person is described as a guy. This word comes from the... | |
 | William Shakespeare - 2001 - 500 pages
...etc.). Needless to say, THOMAS BOWDLER found no place for them in his Family Sh. (1807, etc.), in which "those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." But in his ed. 1821, p. 214, BOSWELL wrote cordially of the merits of Lucrece, which he preferred to... | |
 | William Shakespeare - 2001 - 500 pages
...of JOHNSON, STEEVENS, & REED.] THOMAS BOWDLER (Works, Family Sh., 6 vols., 1860-5, vol. iii) [1860] ["Those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read in a family."] WILLIAM GEORGE CLARK & WILLIAM ALDIS WRIGHT (King Richard II, Select Plays; Clarendon... | |
 | Stanley Wells - Biography & Autobiography - 2003 - 494 pages
...Henrietta (1754-1830), sister of Thomas Bowdler (1754-1825), in the notorious 'Family Shakespeare, in which nothing is added to the original text, but those...cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family'. Publication in 1807 of the four-volume edition was anonymous, perhaps, as Gary Taylor suggests, as... | |
 | Elizabeth Bergmann Loizeaux, Neil Fraistat - Communication - 2002 - 278 pages
...1820, 1823, 1825, 1827, 1831, 1839, 1849, and 1850. Bowdler prefaced the 1818 edition by saying that "Nothing is added to the original text; but those...which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family" (fig. 12). Ostensibly a man of high moral probity, Bowdler saw himself performing a public service.... | |
 | Kate Burridge - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2004 - 256 pages
...Shakespeare and produced the so-called Family Shakespeare, from which, as he described on the title page, 'those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family'. Bowdlerism sought to expunge profanity and sexual explicitness. His activities led to the progressive... | |
 | Ruth Wajnryb - English language - 2005 - 244 pages
...era, set himself the task of writing The Family Shakespeare, creating versions of the original 'in which nothing is added to the original text; but those...cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family'. As well as a clean Shakespeare, Bowdler gave us his name, eponymically. The purging process is called... | |
 | Editors of the American Heritage Dictionaries - Biography - 2005 - 892 pages
...literary pursuits. He is immortalized as the editor of the "Family Shakespeare" (10 vols, 1818), in which "those words and expressions are omitted which cannot with propriety be read aloud in a family." "Bowdlerizing" has become a synonym (or prudish t-xpurgation. Bowe, Riddick, nicknamed Big Daddy 1967-... | |
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