A Select Collection of Old English Plays - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel A Select Collection of Old English Plays Volume I Part 93 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
528. _Nowe_, 1st edit.
529. _Horyson_, 1st edit.
530. _The_, edit. 1569.
531. _Dayes_, 1st edit.
532. _Wunderous_, edit. 1569.
533. _Founde_, 1st edit.
534. _Parell_, 1st edit.
535. _Parellous_, 1st edit.
536. I suppose _wrabbed_ to be a word coined for the sake of rhyme.--_S_.
[But see Nares, 1859, in v., where it is said: "Probably for _rabid_, but so written for the sake of looking to the eye more like a rhyme to _crabbed_."]
537. _Thus_, edit. 1569.
538. _Of_, edit. 1569.
539. _Maryed_, 1st edit. It will be observed that there is no rhyme to the line--
"And oft with them have long tyme taried,"
and it is probable that a line has here dropped out ending with _maryed_, which is the word in the oldest of the three editions.--_Collier_.
540. i.e., Fetch'd. The word is used by Tusser, Spenser, and Shakespeare.--_S_.
541. i.e., Five knaves and two more there, iii.
542. _Overcome_. See note 1 on "G.o.d's Promises." So Eleanor, in the "Second Part of King Henry VI.," A. 1, S. 3, says--
"I'd set my _ten commandments_ in your face"
_Ten Commandments_ seem to have been cant terms for the nails of the hands.
See also Mr Steevens's note on the above pa.s.sage.
543. _Gentleman_, 1st edit.
544. _One_, 1st edit.
545. _You may_, 1st edit. 1569.
546. Mad, furious.
547. Addition in the third edition.
548. _I_, 1st edit.
549. Addition in the third edition.
550. _Rather_, edit. 1569.
551. i.e., One who struts or agitates his body in a pompous manner. So, in Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night"--
"How he jets under his advanced plumes."--_S_.
552. _Make_, edit. 1569.
553. I believe we should read _affin'd_, i.e. joined by affinity to each other. So in "Oth.e.l.lo":
"If partially _affin'd_ or leagued in office."--_S_.
It probably means _a.s.signed_ to the Palmer to wait on him, which was part of the agreement, before the contention began.--_Collier_.
554. _Beste_, 1st edit.
555. First edition reads--
"And I lykewyse, I make G.o.d a vowe."
556. _Cheefest_, edit. 1569.
557. _This_, edit. 1569.
558. _Shewell_, 1st edit.
559. _On_, edit. 1569.
560. _Other_, 1st edit.
561. _Plenteously_, edit. 1569.
562. Perhaps by _parels_ is meant _pareilles_, Fr., _i.e_., things similar, or _parels_. Or it may be only a corruption of _perils_.--_S_.
563. _Are_, edit. 1569.
564. _Nother_, 1st edit.
565. _Take_, edit. 1569.
566. _Escapte_, edit. 1569.
567. [The colophon of the first edition is: "Imprynted at London in Fletestrete at the sygne of the George, by Wyllyam Myddylton." For the particulars of the other two editions, that by Copland being unknown to the former editors, see Hazlitt's "Handbook," p. 269.]
568. Two Interludes: Jack Juggler and Thersites. Edited by Joseph Haslewood, 4to, 1820.