Owes, owns; I. ii. 407. Painful, laborious; III. i. 1. Passion, suffering, grief; I. ii. 392. Passion, to feel pain or sorrow ; V. i. 24. Patch, fool, jester; III. ii. 71. Pay, repay; "to pay home"=" to Plantation, colonisation; interpreted by Antonio in the ordinary sense; II. i. 143. Play, act the part of; "play the men," i.e., behave like men; I. i. | 10. Point, detail; "to point," in every detail; I. ii. 194. Pole-clipt, with poles clipt, or embraced, by the vines; IV. i. 68. Poor-John, a cant name for hake salted and dried; II. ii. 28. Premises, conditions; I. ii. 123. Presented, represented; IV. i. 167. Presently, immediately; I. ii. 125; IV. i. 42. Princess' (Ff. princesse), princesses; I. ii. 173. Profess, to make it one's business; II. i. 236. Profit, to profit; I. ii. 172. Provision, foresight; I. ii. 28. Purchased, acquired, won; IV. i. 14. Putter-out, "p. of five for one," one who invests, puts out, a sum of money before leaving home, on condition of receiving five times the amount on his return, i.e., "at the rate of five for one," (cf. 66 put forth some five thousand pounds to be paid me, five for one, upon the return of myself, my wife, and my dog from the Turk's court at Constantinople"; E. Man out of His Humour, II. i.); III. iii. 48. Quaint, adroit, trim, excellent; I. ii. 317. Quality, skill; I. ii. 193. Rabble, company, crowd (not used 1. ii. 92; reckon ing; II. i. 109. Razorable, ready for shaving; II. i. 250. Rear, raise; II. i. 295. Reason, what is reasonable; III. ii. 128. Reasonable, "reasonable shore," i.c., "shore of reason"; V. i. 81. Recover, restore; II. ii. 71, 79, 97. Reeling-ripe, "in a state of intoxica tion sufficiently advanced for reeling"; V. i. 279. Release, "till your release" = till you release them; V. i. 11. Remember, commemorate; I. ii. 405; remind; I. ii. 243. Remembrance, the faculty of remembering; II. i. 232. Remorse, pity; V. i. 76. Requit, requited; III. iii. 71. Resolve, explain to; V. i. 248. Rid, destroy; I. ii. 364. Scandal'd, scandalous; IV. i. 90. Siege, stool, excrement; II. ii. 110. Single, (1) solitary, (2) feeble; I. ii. 432. Skilless, ignorant; III. i. 53. Sociable, companionable, being in close sympathy; V. i. 63. Something, somewhat; I. ii. 414. Sometime, sometimes; I. ii. 198. Sore, (used quibblingly); V. i. 288. Sort, possibly a punning allusion to "sort"="lot"; II. i. 104. Sot, fool; III. ii. 101. Soundly, thoroughly, smartly; II. ii. 81. South-west, a south-west," i.c., a south-west wind (charged with the noxious breath of the GulfStream); I. ii. 323. Speak, to proclaim; II. i. 8. old proverb that "he must have standing water i.c., water neither ebbing nor flowing; II. i. 221. Steaded, stood in good stead; I. ii. 165. Still closing, constantly closing again; III. iii. 64. Still-vexed, ever troubled; I. ii. 229. Stock-fish, dried cod; III. ii. 79. Stomach, courage, I. ii. 157; appetite, inclination; II. i. 107. Stover, fodder for cattle; IV. i. 63. Strange, rare; III. iii. 87. Strangely, wonderfully; IV. i. 7. Study, to give thought and attention to, to wonder; II. i. 81. Substitution, deputyship; I. ii. 103. Subtilties, the word "subtilty" was borrowed from the language of cookery, and denoted a device in pastry, hence "illusion"; V. i. 124. Sudden, swift; II. i. 306. Suffered, i.e., suffered death; II. ii. 38. Suggestion, prompting, hint (cf. villainy); II. i. 288. Sustaining, bearing (them) up; I. ii. 218. Swabber, one who sweeps or swabs the deck of a ship; II. ii. 48. Tabor and pipe, from Brit. Mus. MSS., Add. 12228. Tabor, a small drum used for festivities; IV. i. 175. Taborer, a player on a tabor; III. | Trifle, phantom; V. i. 112. Troll, run glibly over (perhaps "sing irregularly"); III. ii. 126. Twilled (?) covered with reeds or sedges; IV. i. 64. (cf. Note). Twink, a twinkling; IV. i. 43. 6. From the basement of a tomb in the Church of Folleville (Dept. of the Somme). Tend, attend; I. i. 6. Trash, to check the speed of hounds when too forward; I. ii. 81. Trebles, "tr. thee o'er," i.c., "makes thee thrice what thou art"; II. i. 221. Trembling, the "tremor" which is represented to be a sign of being possessed by the devil; II. ii. 83. Trencher, (first Folio, trenchering, due to the previous words ining); II. ii. 187. Trice, on a tr.," i.e., " in an instant"; V. i. 238. Tricksy, sportive; V. i. 226. MSS. Brit. Mus., Add. 11390. Unstanched, incontinent; I. i. 48. Up-staring, standing on end; I. ii. 213. Urchins, hedgehogs, hobgoblins; I. ii. 326. Urchin-shows, elfin apparitions; II. ii. 5. Use, to be accustomed; II. i. 175. Vanity, illusion; IV. i. 41. Vast, silent void, or vacancy (of night); I. ii. 327. Verily, true; II. i. 321. Virgin-knot; alluding to the girdle worn by maidens in ancient times; IV. i. 15. Visitation, affliction (as of a plague); III. i. 32. Visitor, priestly visitant, "consolator"; II. i. 11. Vouched, warranted; II. i. 60. Waist, the part of a ship between When (an exclamation of impatience); I. ii. 316. While-ere, short time since; III. ii. 127. Whist, hushed, silent; I. ii. 379. Windring (not found elsewhere) (?) "winding' or "wandering "; IV. i. 128. Wink, the act of closing the eye, II. i. 285; (a short distance measured by a "wink"; II. i. 242). Wink, to close the eyes; II. i. 216. Wisest, "after the wisest,' i.e., "in the wisest fashion "; II. ii. 77. Woe, sorry; V. i. 139. Works, affects; IV. i. 144. Wound, twined about; II. ii. 13. Wrangle, contend, quarrel; V. i. 174. Wrong; "to do oneself wrong," i.c., "to be much mistaken " ; I. ii. 443. rare, ready! I. i. 6; I. i. 34. rarely, alertly; I. i. 3. Yond, there; I. ii. 409. Your (subjective genitive); V. i. II. Zenith, the highest point of one's fortune; I. ii. 181. Projected from an engraving in The Country Housewife's Garden (1617). Notes. I. i. 68. long heath, brown furze;' so the folios; Hanmer's emendation has been generally accepted:-'ling, heath, broom, furze.' I. ii. 24. my magic garment: the magician's mantle, circle, and book (ep. Act V.) are well illustrated by the following woodcut: 6 6 I. ii. 100. Who having into truth;' into,' used in the sense of unto,' and so emended in most editions; the sentence though very involved is intelligible without any alteration; into truth' depends upon a sinner'; and 'it' refers vaguely to his own lie'; ' to credit'=' as to credit.' I. ii. 169. Now I arise;' probably derived from astrology; now my star is in the ascendant;' it should be noted that the stage direction 'Resumes his mantle' is not in the folios. I. ii. 266. for one thing she did;' Shakespeare does not tell us what he refers to here; perhaps he merely added the point in order to account for her preservation, or the incident may have been mentioned in his original. I am, however, strongly inclined to suggest that there is no mystery about the passage; the one thing she did' probably anticipates hither brought with child'; for that reason alone her life was spared. I. ii. 333.stroakst me and made,' so Folios; Rowe, strokedst me and madest,' so Camb. Ed. and Mod. Edd. generally. 6 I. II. 334. Water with berries in't;' Mr W. G. Gosling quotes the following striking parallel from Strachey's Narrative :-"They are full of shaws of goodly cedars. . . The berries whereof our men straining, and letting stand some three or four daies, made a kind of pleasant drink." |