Not so bright and beautiful

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  • jonfan
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 1445

    #91
    Joseph Addison’s version of Psalm 23 has ‘the friendly crook shall be thine aid’. Found in that original version in EH of 1933.

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    • PeterboroughDiapason
      Full Member
      • Mar 2012
      • 72

      #92
      Originally posted by Old Grumpy View Post

      Ah, but there is an all important comma, is there not?

      God rest you merry, gentlemen...
      But, according to Andrew Gant, the comma was BEFORE merry in the earliest versions and he quotes broadsheets and The Monthly Review from the 18th century that have this. Also The Gentleman's Magazine in 1824 and George Eliot in Silas Marner. Dickens quotes it without a comma at all. So when did the pedants (I include myself!) decide they were all wrong?


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      • vinteuil
        Full Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 12933

        #93
        wiki provides some background -



        ,

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        • smittims
          Full Member
          • Aug 2022
          • 4327

          #94
          I've always preferrred the alternative words as set by Vaughan Williams:

          Come all you worthy gentlemen
          That may be standing by

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