a ™ mJi . KM - ! ! TO THE SHAKESPEARIAN REFEREE, A CYCLOPAEDIA OF FOUR THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED WORDS, OBSOLETE AND MODERN, OCCURRING IN THE PLAYS OF SHAKESPEARE, With original and other explanations, commentaries, annotations, etymologies, etc., derived from a great variety ■ of authentic sources. TO WHICH ARE ADDED TRANSLATIONS OF ALL THE LATIN, FRENCH, ITALIAN, AND SPANISH WORDS OCCURRING IN THE PLAYS. BY ,^ J. H. SIDDONS. isr , ~~~7£ f The Work was suggested by the penurious character of the Glossaries. WASHINGTON : W. H. LOWDERMILK & Co. 1 886. Copyright, 1886, By Maby Agnes Siddons. Gibson Bros., Printers, Washington, D. C. DEDICATED WITH PROFOUND RESPECT Mr. HENRY IRVING. IN PREFERENCE TO ANY DEDICATORY LANGUAGE OF MY OWN, I USE THE JUST AND BRILLIANT TRIBUTE PAID TO HIM BY THE LONDON TELEGRAPH, WHICH SAYS : "We hold of Mr. Henry Irving that during his career of management he has brought Shakespeare home to the people through the public presentation of his plays. Instead of destroying the garden he has cleared it of weeds. The Shakespeare of the stage has often been vulgarized by careless managers and vain actors. Some enemy in the night has sown tares among the wheat. By careful husbandry the Lyceum manager has cleared the crop of its noxious undergrowth. The heresies of David Garrick and Colley Cibber have disappeared from the best known of the Shakespearian plays, and no one can honestly say that in any of Mr. Irving's stage versions, however beautiful in colour, glowing in dress, or superb in panorama, he has ever rejected one beautiful thought, ever crushed one vital scene, or ever wilfully suppressed or mutilated one sublime passage. He has restored far more than he has omitted, and in the aftertime people will own, who have carefully followed his truly national work, that he, as much if not more than any English manager, has made Shakespeare understood, appreciated, and loved by his countrymen." PREFACE A love and veneration for Shakespeare's immortal crea- tions, and a familiarity with the mass of literature they have iD spired, and which has found its expressions in every con- ceivable form, in every country, and in every language of the globe, for the past three hundred years, will be con- ceded by the reader to the author of the following pages. A pure taste, a rare talent for research, a liberal education, which included the study of humanity in many of its ab- stract principles, as well as in its intellectual phases, will also be appreciated by the thoughtful scholar and ardent student of Shakespeare. A mind of such order, with a sin- gular industry as to time and opportunity, together with a memory as tenacious and clear at eighty-five as at eighteen, are certainly possessions of no mean value, and should at least entitle the owner to a full share of public confidence in any work which he might see fit to publish. Such a store of knowledge, gleaned from such rich fields of thought before and after other reapers had reaped, that no grain of fact or fancy should be lost by which his gift to posterity could be enriched, has been a cherished object for many years of Mr. Siddons' life. But, alas ! the hands which should have rounded to symmetry the work as it passed through the press are forever at rest. Death, vi Preface. the mighty gleaner of all mortal life, has used his scythe. Still, the deep regret expressed by those interested in the labors of Mr. Siddons, that the present work must pass from the press without the valuable aid which his correction would give to his book, must not lead us,- however, to forget, in our selfish disappointment, to thank those friends who, in the supreme moment of bereave- ment, gave their services unstintingly to the correction of proof-sheets, and to forward in every way the object which the author held so dear at heart, namely, the production of the Shakespearian Referee. INTRODUCTION, The Shakespearian Referee is, we believe, the only work of its peculiar character extant. Glossaries without number, and more or less valuable to the student, accompany many of the annotated editions of Shakespeare's works, and form part of the literature of each successive generation since the time of Shakespeare to the present period. A few of these works show an unmistakable intellectual calibre, with high scholastic attainments of the first order ; the majority, however, are obtuse and almost obscure when they seek to explain a word or passage that is in the least profound in its philosophy or uncertain in its meaning, and extreme tenuity of thought might very well apply in illus- trating the character of their pages. But in all human work error is a prime ingredient. Some workers have a wonderful knack of exposing defect, others the happy faculty of hiding fault, but it is never absent — it may sit in the aperture of the one lost brick, or support the failing strength of the one decaying beam, but it is always there. The circumstances surrounding the Shakespearian Referee as it went into the printer's hands, and during its progress to those of the public, are in themselves sufficient to mark it with error. Therefore, we hope that severe criticism will be turned aside, and judicious comment, like viii Introduction. the pruning knife to the tree, will give strength to future editions of the book, and fruit that the readers and lovers of Shakespeare will enjoy without stint. The Shakespearian Eeferee includes in its scope not only four thousand words, with then modern meaning ; not only original thought and reflection apropos of so suggestive a theme; but rare scraps of information concerning their primitive state, their wondrous change, and subtle growth — showing how the domestic and political needs of the people, as they advanced toward a higher plane and achieved a loftier standard of intelligence, forced into life a more polished mode of expression, so that many words well equipped with sound reason at their first step fell in the ranks and were carried to the rear in the grand march of time. SHAKESPEARIAN REFEREE. A. A'. A vulgar substitute for " he." Abate. To subdue ; depress ; lower. Abated. Dejected. Abatement. Diminution. Aberga'ny. An abbreviation of Abergavenny, (Wales,) and the ordinary method of pronouncing the longer word. Abhor. To protest against. Abide. To wait upon ; be responsible for. Abirding. Hawking ; falconry. Abjects. Debased individuals ; the lowest subjects in a mon- archy. Able. To qualify ; uphold. Abraham Cupid. It has been surmised in sundry editions of Shakespeare's plays that this is a mistake of the copyist or printer for "Adam Cupid," or "Adam Bell," or "Au- burn Cupid." Wiry disturb the original supposition that the author wrote "Abraham Cupid?" No man in Scripture history enjoyed more of the favor over which the mythological deity presided than "Father Abraham." God promised to make of him a great nation ; and his family alliances and affairs, in which Cupid officiated, seem to have contributed to the fulfilment of the promise. Abridgment. Brief entertainment. Abroach. Revived ; breach ; renewed quarrel. Abrook. To brook ; abide. Absey Book. ABC book — a catechism ; a rudimental work. Absolute. Positive ; certain. Absque hoc nihil est. (Lat.) Without thee there is nothing. Absyotas. The brother of Medea, murdered by her when she fled from Colchos with Jason. Abused. Deceived. 2 Abuser. Impostor ; deluder. Aby. To suffer ; abide by experience. Abysm. Abyss ; depth. Accite. To incite ; summon. Accomplished. Equipped. Accountant. Responsible ; criminal. Accuse. An accusation. Acheron. One of the rivers of the infernal regions. Aches. Pains. That this word was pronounced " aitches " in Shakespeare's time is to be inferred from the poetical measure of the text in The Tempest, Timon of Athens, and other plays. Achieve. To accomplish. Acknown. Known to ; acknowledged. Aconitum. Wolf's bane. Across. Unskilfully. Adam Bell. A famous archer, and, like Robin Hood, an out- law who was made the subject of a ballad. Adamant. Magnetic power. Addition. Character ; title ; rank. Address. To prepare oneself. Addressed. Ready! Admittance. Fashion. Ado. To do ; bother. Adsum. Present ! here ! at hand ! Advance. To prefer ; honor ; promote. Advertise. To admonish ; to procure a substitute. Advertising. Paying attention. Advise. Reflect ; take heed ; follow the counsel of older and wiser people. Advocation. Oratorical pleading. Aery, or Airie. An eagle's or hawk's nest. Affeard. Afraid. Affect the letter. To practice alliteration. Affects. Afflictions ; passions. Affecteth. Inclines towards. Affiance. Trust ; confidence ; loyalty. Affianced — Affined. Allied to ; connected by blood or office. Affront. Confront ; encounter ; attack. Affy. To betroth ; to rely upon. Afield. In the field with the forces. Afoot. Ready ; standing ; prepared. Agate eing. The agate implied a diminutive person. The addition "ring" suggests the rotundity of the figure of the person addressed ; an inn-keeper. Agazed. Looking amazed. Agebnon. The father of Europa, who was carried off by Ju- piter and married to him at Crete. Aggeavate. Different significations are given to this word by lexicographers and common use. "Softening" and "ir- ritating " are equally applicable. Falstaff ( Merry Wives) uses the word in the latter and even a broader sense. Bottom, the weaver, employs it in the former sense, to render his voice more mellifluous. Agincottet, or Azincoue. A village in France near which Henry V of England gained a great battle on St. Crispin's Day. Aglet, or Aiguillette. (From the Fr. aiguille — a needle.) The tag or a point of a cord forming a decoration, either of worsted, cotton, or bullion, according to the rank and position of the wearer. Attached to the right shoulder and drawn to the centre of the chest the points fall three or four inches below the attachment. Aglet-baby. An infant pleased with an aiguillette. Agnise. Confess ; acknowledge. Agood. Earnestly ; heartily. Ahold. An old sea phrase, meaning "hauled up." Aident. Helpful, (from the Fr. aider — to assist.) Aim. Guess ; experience. Aio. Aio te JEneide — Momanus vincere posse. " I say that thou, JEneas, the Romans may conquer." An am- biguous reply from the oracle. A la nostea casa ben venuto molte honorato, Signor mio Pe- truchio. ( To our house right welcome with much honor, my lord jPetruchio.) Alcides. Another name for Hercules. Shakespeare uses both names in the same speech, euphuistically, simply to avoid repetition. Aldee-liefest. (Germ.) Best beloved. Ale. The Yule — a word of Scandinavian origin, implying the months of November and December, and having refer- ence to a feast, whence old England translated it to Christmas time, when ale was drank at the annual com- memoration. Alecto. One of the Furies. Alice. "Alice tu as ete en Angleterre," &c. (See Appendix for the entire translation of the dialogue in Henry J 7 ", in which this passage, et seq., occurs.) Aliena. Oelia (As You Like It) adopts this name because it is most alien to her social position at Court. All Hallown Summer. A whimsical title for an individual in whom the frost of age is combined with the frolicsome spirit of youth — Falstaff* for instance. Alliteration. For a happy satire on the tendency of Shakes- peare's contemporary writers to indulge in alliteration, see the Prologue to the artisan's play in A Midsummer N'ighfs Dream. AlLons. (Fr.) Come; come along; let us go. Allowance. Favorable acceptance. All waters. An allusion to the hue, clearness, and brilliancy of jewels, the topaze being one of them. Timon of Athens. All ways. In every direction ; as distinct from always; inva- ■ riably. Allycholy. A queer corruption of melancholy. Alonson. A German ; a native of Allemania, the appellation of Germany when it formed a part of the ancient Roman empire. It is still called Allemagne by the French. Alms-drink. The name that was given to the remainder of the wine that had been left untouched at a banquet, and intended for the poor. In modern times waiters at taverns, and other domestics, do not disdain to appro- priate the " droppings." Amaimon. One of Satan's deputies who has a special charge in Acheron. Amaze. Alarm ; confound ; dismay. Amazonian chin. A chin as smooth as a woman's. Amerce. To fine. Ames-ace. Two aces — the lowest throw of a pair of dice. Amiss. Misfortune ; misshapen ; disaster. Amort. (Fr.) Half dead; dejected. Amurath. Turkish history records that the Emperor Amu- rath, who was the second son of his father, and there- fore .not the legitimate heir to the throne, invited all his brothers to a banquet on his accession and caused them to be strangled. An. Used in the sense of "if;" "an'twere" — as if it were. Anchises. The father of iEneas. The instance of filial affec- tion referred to by Cassius {Julius Ccesar) is mentioned by Homer. Anchor. Anchoret or anchorite ; a hermit ; from the Greek root chores — "I retire." Ancient. A corruption of enseigne, (Fr.;) the standard-bearer of a regiment or a commander-in-chief. The title " en- sign" is also given to the standard itself. Cassius {Julius Ccesar) uses it in both senses in the same speech : 9 ' ' This ensign here of mine was turning back, I slew the villain and did take it from him." Andrew. The ship of the name to which allusion is made in the Merchant of Venice was probably the Andrea, a large Genoese vessel of which Shakespeare may have heard; or he may have referred -to a Scotch vessel, so called in compliment to James I, St. Andrew being the tutelar saint of Scotland. Angel. A gold coin (originally French) current in England until the reign of Charles I. It bore the figure of an Angel* upon the obverse, because the complimentary re- mark of the Romish missionary who was struck with the beauty of the Anglo-Saxon children identified the ap- pearance of the English with the traditional winged messengers of the Supreme Deity. JVon Angli sed An- gell was the memorable phrase of the pious monk who went to England to proselytize the disciples of the heathen Druids. The pecuniary value of the angel (the coin) varied with the financial and commercial condition of successive reigns. It was sometimes worth 6s. 8d., sometimes 10s. In the time of Henry IV it must have fallen in exchangeable value, for it would only purchase a small bottle of sack. * St. Michael piercing the dragon also appears on some of the coins. 6 " This bottle makes an angel," says Bardolph when Fal- staff throws a bottle, as if it were a pistol, to his hench- man that it might be filled with sack. Annoy. Annoyance. Anointed. "Deputies of Heaven." Kings were formerly anointed at their coronation and were called the " depu- ties of Heaven " from the doctrine of " Divine right " taught in the days of absolutism. (See Cardinal Pan- dulph, King John.) Richard III calls himself the "Lord's anointed." Anon. Presently ; immediately ; " coming " is the reply of a waiter at a hotel. Anothek. Simply " the other." Anthkopophagi. Literally, eaters of human flesh ; cannibals. By "the other people," whom Othello mentions as wear- ing " their heads beneath their shoulders," Shakespeare probably intended to describe the mountaineers whose necks are so enlarged by swellings, (goitres,) from the use of molten snow, that the head is borne down by the weight below the level of the shoulders. Antiates. The people of Antium, the capital of the Volsce, (Co?'iolanus.) Antic. The fool in old farces ; also a piece of senile antiquity, as " Old Father Antic, the law." {Henry IV, first part.) Antics. Puppets. Antiopa, or Antiope. Another name for Hippolyta, the Queen of the Amazons, {Midsummer Nights Dream.) Antipodes. The idea entertained by Hermia, {Midsummer Nights Dream,) that the moon would vex the sun by getting into the centre of the earth, is an ingenious poetic flight. The effect of such a catastrophe in crea- tion (admitting its possibility) was never dreamt of be- fore. Lorenzo {Merchant of Venice) correctly inter- prets the relative positions of the inhabitants of the earth's surface. Antique. Amongst moderns the term implies the classical epochs of Greece and Rome, but when it is used by a Greek (as Theseus — Midsummer Nights Dream) it may be taken in the sense of " antic " — farcical. Antoniad. Cleopatra's flag-ship, named after Marc Antony. Antres. Deep caverns. Appaeent. Evidently ; obvious ; clear to the apprehension. Appeach. To impeach. Appeal. Charge; accuse. Appeaeed. Shown. Appeeil. Peril ; place in danger. Appertainment. Dignities ; prerogatives. Apple john. A shrivelled apple that will keep sweet for two years. Appointment. Preparation. Appeehension. Sarcasm. Apprehensive. Quick of comprehension. Appeobation. Novitiate ; applicable to a lady taking the veil ; also, proof ; establishing by proof. Appeopeiation. Addition or embossment of one's own good parts. Appeove. To prove or support an assertion. Appeovees. A jury ; judges. Apeicoces. Apricots. Apeil day. An old term, indicating the youth of man. Apron men. Mechanics. Apt. Prepared ; to the purpose ; likely. Aqua vit^. Literally, the water of life, but applied, ironi- cally, to strong waters, *. e., alcoholic liquids. Aeabian bied. Certain commentators have supposed the Phoe- nix to be referred to in praise of Marc Antony. The parallel is not obvious. Phoenix is the name of the palm tree, which, being burnt to the ground, rises again from its own ashes. A bird was imagined to have the same property, and is hence called the Phoenix. Marc An- tony did not rise after Cleopatra had ruined him. Aech. A chief. The word is in great use as an affix or prefix to the official titles of magnates, as archbishop, arch- angel, monarch, Tetrarch, &c. [In the three last words arch is pronounced ark.~\ Aeden. (See As You Liee It.) Aedoue of the liver. The seat of the passions according to antique physiology. Abgiebs. The old name of Algiers. Abgel, Argal, or Argo. A corruption of ergo, (Lat.,) therefore. Argosy, Argosies. The Argo, the ship which is fabled to have carried Jason and his comrades to Colchos, in search of the fleece, doubtless suggested to the Venetians this name for certain of their vessels which sailed to India ; but it is somewhere stated that the vessels were called Ragosies, because built at Ragusa. Shakespeare proba- bly adopted the earlier interpretation, as it helped to carry out the idea of Portia's suitors going in search of her wealth and herself. Argument. Plot of a play ; summary of an epic poem ; sub- ject of mirth. Ariachne. The passage which contains this word was prob- ably written Arachne by Shakespeare, as the allusion to the "woof" suggests the spider's web. Arachnida is the technical term for certain invertebrate insects of a carnivorous character. Ariadne. The mythological tale of the unfortunate daughter of Minos of Crete has formed the subject of several plays and poems. Ariel. A creature of the air ; the slave of Prosper 'o, ( Tem- pest.) Armed staves. Lances. Arm girt. Clothed in armor. Armigero. Formally applied to men who wore armor. Justice Shallow employs the term to define his position as a squire or esquire. Armiger is the correct word. Aroint. Avaunt! vanish! Arras. Hangings of tapestry which were made at Arras, in France, and used to cover the bareness of walls before papering and pictures came in as substitutes." Some remnants of tapestry hangings are still to be found in old palaces in England, France, and Germany as curious specimens of an extinct art. Art. An artificial style ; theory ; acquired knowledge. Arthur's bosom. A mistake of Mrs. Quickly's for Abraham's bosom. Arthur's show. A convention of toxopholites at Mile-end Green, near London. They called themselves Knights of King Arthur's Round Table. Articulate, v. To treat with, *. e., enter into treaties, politi- cal or military ; to proclaim in public. 9 Artificial gods. Helena {Midsummer JVighfs Dream) is here referring to Penelope's labors on a piece of tapestry. Artless jealousy. Undisguised suspicions. As. "As if." Ascenius. The son of iEneas. Asher house " Esher " House. The residence of the Bishop of Winchester, cetat Henry VIII. Aside. The bracketed word which, in the printed plays, so often occurs in dialogues, is an instruction to the actor to deliver his words in a low tone, with head inverted, that the interlocutor may not be supposed to hear what is imparted to the audience alone. Ascapart. A giant slain by Sir Bevis. Ask. Demand; require. "My business asketh haste." Asperse, v. To sprinkle or disperse. Aspis. An asp or serpent. Assail. To address the ear. Assay, v. To essay ; endeavor to make assay. Assineco. A little ass ; a foal. Assinego. A donkey. Asquint. Cross-eyed ; sinister. Assubjugate. To debase oneself. Astonished. Stunned. Astringer. A falconer, who keeps a goshawk. As you like it. The origin of this play has been ascribed to Chaucer's " Gamelyn ;" but there is little doubt that Shakespeare owed some part of it to "Rosalind, Eu- phue's Golden Legacy" by Thomas Lodge. The scene, or supposed locality of the original, is France, and the period when the government of the country was vested in sundry independent dukedoms, owing suzerainete to the monarch. Some commentators, with the French lo- cale in their heads, have asserted that the forest of Ar- den was in the vicinity of Ardennes, one of the depart- ments, and gave the name to the actual department. But Mr. Green, in his elaborate and valuable work, " The Making of England" has shown that the Arden of Shakespeare's play was more probably part of a dense woodland which stretched away from modern Kugby to Evesham, to the bounds of Cannock Chase, now called 10 "Woodend," and extended from the valley of the Sev- ern to the limits of Leicestershire. Mr. Green says : " This was Arden, the forest into whose depths Shakes- peare could stray, centuries later, from his childhood's home at Stratford, and in whose glades his fancy placed the scene of one of his loveliest dramas. But in Shakes- peare's day its moss was broken everywhere by the clear- ings of the Warwickshire men ; towns were planted in the very heart of the woodlands, and the miner had thinned its clumps with his forges." The identity of Arden with the French or English locality is therefore matter of conjecture. Atalanta. Mythology assigns to the lady a fair pair of heels and likewise severe chastity. The latter is the " better part" attributed to Rosalind, (As You Like It.) Ate. The goddess of discord, who would seem to have been relegated to the infernal regions ; though Jupiter, accord- ing to the heathen idea, only banished her to the earth, where she raised commotions among men. Atomie. The smallest atom. At once. Once for all. Atone. Agree ; be reconciled ; " at one " with a person or his argument. Atropos. One of the Fates. Attaint. Weariness. Attasked. Taken to task ; reproved. Attended. Expected ; waited for. Attorneys. Agents ? a class of lawyers. In England they are a grade below the barristers, and prepare cases for them, and are now generally called solicitors. Attorneys general. Legal and general representatives ; coun- sel for the Crown. Attribute. Merit or quality ascribed to a person or object. Audit. Hearing ; account. Augre. An awl or gimlet. Aunts. A cant word for truths. Aurora. A poetical name for the dawn of day. Mythologi- cally, "the mother of the winds and the stars," who fly at her approach from the east, heralding the sun. Avaunt. Away! Vanish! also dismissal. "Give him the avaunt," i. e., send him about his business. 11 Ave. (Lat.) Hail! Ave Maria. Hail, Mary ! An invocation to the Virgin by the Roman Catholics, who pray to her as the mediatrix be- tween man and the grace of Heaven. Avoid. Depart ! go hence ! Awake. Arouse thee ! Away with. To like or dislike a person. " I cannot away with him.'' Likewise a command to remove an offender to prison. Awe. Law ; lawful authority. Aweary. Tired ; fatigued. Ayveful. Rightful ; lawful ; worshipful. Aweless. Unreverenced ; not feared. Axe. Hangmen were supplied with this implement of de- struction, that it might be used, if necessary, at execu- tions in lieu of a rope. Ay. Yes ! Pronounced "I," and therefore made the subject of puns, I doing duty for Ay. Aye. Forever. Ay me. A simple interjection, like "heigh ho !" Baccare, in. Stand back ! " Give place !" Backwards, ad. The past state. Bacon fed. Falstaff contemptuously terms the men he is, after his manner, assisting to rob, "bacon fed knaves." Bacon seems to have been the food of menials in England time out of mind. Langland, who wrote " Piers' Plow- man," (before Chaucer appeared,) has this line : " And as a bondraan of his bacon, his beard was bedrivelled." Badge, n., (of faith.) Taken in the ordinary sense, a proof or mark of servitude. Baffle, v. To embarrass ; defeat ; treat with ignominy ; abuse. Bairn, n. Brushwood ; a child. Baked meats, n. A dish at funeral feasts. Balance, n. A measure ; scales. Baldrick, n. A belt crossing the chest from the shoulder to the waist. Bale, ad. Misery ; calamity ; synonymous also with bane ; harm ; mischief. 12 Balk, v. To pile up. Ballase, n. Ballast. Ballow. A cudgel. Balm, n. The oil of consecration. Used also in anointing a king at his coronation. Ban, n. Curse ; malediction ; v., to outlaw. Banbuey. A town in Oxfordshire celebrated for cheeses and pies. Band. Synonymous with bond. Ban-dog. Band-dog ; chained up ; banded ; n., a watch-dog, formerly an "institution" in English villages. Bandy, v. To carry ; reply ; retort. Bank, v. To sail between the banks of a river. Banked, ad. Enclosed. Bak, n. A court of law ; a barrier ; a sign in heraldry. Bakabbas, n. Shylock {Merchant of Venice) can find no bet- ter illustration of his contempt for a Christian than by expressing his wish that his daughter had married one of the tribe of the " impenitent thief " crucified at the same time with the Saviour. Babbaky hen, n. A bird from the North of Africa. From several allusions in Shakespeare it would seem that there was a considerable importation of poultry from that region. The Barbary hen was accustomed to ruffle its plumage when excited or alarmed. From its prolific nature it is referred to in Othello as "a Guinea hen." Babba^on. The- appellation of an imaginary fiend. Baebe. A species of veil. Baebed, ad. Covered with armor. Horses, in - the middle ages, were clothed in armor if they went to the battle- field. Spikes, protective and offensive, protruded from their chest and forehead. Baeber monger. Habitual beard shaving in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was one of the signs of coxcombry. The man who resorted to a barber to have his chin " reaped " was stigmatized with this appellation. Baek, v. To strip the bark of a tree from the trunk. Baem. Yeast; froth; v., a necessary stage in the process of brewing or baking. Baenacle. The clakes or tree goose; also a shell-fish. Baens. To keep in a barn. Baeeen. Empty ; low ; ignorant ; sterile ; bare. Base. Mean ; bad ; degraded ; also, a rustic game ; the coun- try base — orignally prisoners' base — now base ball ; v., to sound a deep note ; to challenge. Base couet, (basse coar, Fr.) The lower court of a castle or superior domicile. Bases. A kind of embroidered mantle or loose breeches, worn on horseback. Basilisk. A cannon decorated with objects in cast-iron re- sembling- dragons and the fabled cockatrice — a bird whose eyes were supposed to possess the power of striking one dead at a single glance. The basiliscus mitratus of natural history is a revolting object; it is 10 inches in length, with a tail of 20 inches. Basilisco-like. Resembling a boastful knight of the name in an old drama. Basta. Enough, (Span, and Ital.) Bastaed. It would appear from the application of this term to Falconbridge (King John) and the Orleans noble- man (Henry VI) that it was not considered an offen- sive appellation when a low standard of morality pre- vailed. Bastinado. A severe punishment inflicted by beating on the soles of the feet of a prostrate culprit. It is common in Spain, Persia, Turkey, and China. Bate, n. Strife; v., to dwindle; fall away; to nutter the feathers. Bated. Excepted. Bat-fowling. Netting birds at night. Batlet. A small, flat, wooden implement used by laundresses in washing linen. Battalia. A large body of soldiers ; an army. Batten. To graze; to eat of inferior food. "Go batten on cold bits." Battle, v. To fight ; n., a force ; a division of an army ; a fight. Batty, ad. Like a bat. Bauble- A trifle ; a fool's baton with a comical head, having a cap and bells at one end. 14 Bavin. A. fire that is soon extinguished. Bawcock. A fine bird, (from the French beau coque;) a term expressive of admiration. Bay, v. To howl at ; rebuke ; check ; surround. To stand " at bay " is to confront a foe, when escape is hopeless, and a deadly combat imminent. As a noun, the word signifies the principal beam in a house. Bay cuetal. A bay horse with a shortened (or docked) tail. Baynard's castle. An edifice which stood in Thames street, London, near the river Thames. Bead. An old Saxon word, signifying "prayer." In Roman Catholic countries beads are perforated and strung to- gether, the better to enable the pious persons who use them to count the number of times in succession they utter a "Pater Noster " or an "Ave Maria." Beadsmen. Pious men who prayed for the well-being and eternal beatitude of the person or persons by whom they were succored or entertained. They resembled, in that respect, the fakirs (wandering mendicants) of India. Those who were in good condition were required to keep a bow and arrows of the yew tree in their abodes for the public service on emergencies. Beadle. Vide Blue Bottle Rogue ; also, an executioner. Beak. The prow or forepart of a ship. Beam. The staff of a lance. Bear, n. The "burning bear," a name of the Pleiades, or "Charles' Wain." To have a feeling of toleration to- wards a person. "Bear with me." Bear-head. A keeper of bears ; a common profession when bear-baiting and bear-dancing were popular entertain- ments. Bear in hand. An idiomatic form of intimating control ; keep in suspense ; keep in good humor ; delude with hopes. " Bear a hand " is a nautical phrase for " lend your aid." Bears. In calling Lord Warwick's family by this name, ref- erence is had to the crest of the Nevilles, which was a bear. Beard, v. To defy ; n., a stage property for the use of a player. " WTiat beard shall I play it in?" asks Bottom, the weaver, when cast for the part of Pyramxis. 15 Bearing. Demeanor. Bearing cloth. The mantle with which an infant was gener- ally covered when taken to a church to be baptized. Bear-a-brain. To resemble another exactly. Beat-in falconry. To nutter ; desire ; hunt for. Beaver. A part of the ancient helmet moving on a swivel so that it could be raised in front, exposing the face and assisting the sight, or lowered to cover and protect the features in a combat or tourney. It was generally cross- barred or loopholed, so that it could be seen through by the wearer, and enabled him to breathe. The helmets of the middle ages had longitudinal apertures across the mouth. Walter Scott describes certain warriors as " drinking red wine through their helmets barred." Beck. A salutation. " Nods and becks," &c.-^— Milton. Becomed, ad. Modest ; prudent. Bedded, ad. Matted ; flattened ; flaked. Bedfellow. Intimate friend ; companion ; wife. Bedward. Going to bed. Bed of ware. A remarkably large bed originally forming an article of household furniture in the Mansion House at Ware, in Hertfordshire. It was moved thence to an inn in Ware, and was at a later period sold by auction, falling ultimately into the possession of Charles Dickens, the author. It was considered large in the 16th century, wherefore Shakespeare puts an allusion to it into the mouth of Sir Toby Belch, {Twelfth Night,) The date of its construction was marked on a part of the wood, "1463," and it was elaborately carved. The posts, of which there were four, represented urns ; they were of delicate workmanship ; equally so was the tester, which exhibited carved work of red and white roses emble- matic of the union of the houses of York and Lancaster. Bedlam. Corruption of Bethlehem, the name of a hospital for lunatics in London,f ounded early in the thirteenth century. Beef-witted. This compound occurs twice in Shakespeare, but it was founded on a wrong inference. No nations are more strong-witted (strong-minded) than the Eng- lish and the American, the greatest eaters of beef among civilized nations. 16 Beetle. To overhang, as of a rock or projecting summit of a mountain. Beetle-browed. Wealing a frowning aspect. The word is evidently derived from its precursor. (See, also, " Three man Beetle.") Beggar's book. A proverbial phrase for learning. Begrime. Blacken — render filthy and offensive. Beguile. Deceive ; make time pass agreeably. Behests. Commands. Beholding, ad. Under an obligation. Behowl. To howl at. Being. Abode. Belch up. To cast up from the sea. Beldame. Derived from a French complimentaiy term, {belle dame — beautiful lady.) It came to be applied, in its Anglicized and corrupt form, to hags and witches. (See Macbeth, King John, &c.) Beleed. Becalmed. Belike. Probably ; " it seems that ;" perhaps. Bell, book, and candle. Implying excommunication. In the Papal ceremony a bell was tolled, some passages read from a holy book, and three candles extinguished. Belongings. Endowments ; all that pertains to an individual in property and family. Bemete. Bemeasured. . Bemoiled. Covered with mire ; disgraced. Bend. To move in a given direction. Bends. Bows ; reverential curtesies. Benedictte. (Lat.) Be you blessed ! Benevolences. Taxes under an agreeable and charitable name ; compulsory exactions disguised as voluntary actions. Benumbed. Rendered insensible ; inflexible. Ben venuto. (Ital.) Welcome! Bergomask- A rustic dance in Bergomisco, a Venetian prov- ince. Bermoothes. The old appellation for the cluster of islands now called Bermuda. The name is derived from Ber- mudez, the Spanish navigator, by whom they were dis- covered. IT Beshrew. A phrase implying self-condemnation if the condi- tion of certain assertions be not fulfilled. "Beshrew me but I love her heartily'' is equivalent to "Ma3 r I suffer damage if I do not." "Upon my word," "upon my honor," are now in use with the same effect. The vocabulary of such protestations is extensive. Besmirch. To render foul or dirty. Besort. Attention ; suitableness ; companionship. Best. Bravest. Bestel. Poor condition. Bestow. Put away ; deposit ; hide ; treat handsomely. Bestowing. Control. Bestraught. Distracted. Bestride. The act of standing across an object. It was a chivalrous custom "once upon a time" to bestride a prostrate foe or friend killed in action. Falstaff expects Prince Hal to bestride him. The Colossus at Bhodes bestrode the channel, and the attitude of apparent sov- ereignty in that lofty statue has furnished a comparison, in more than one instance, to a despotic dominance. Cassius speaks of Ccesar (Julius Ccesar) as bestriding " the narrow world like a Colossus." Beteem. Allow; permit; give; pour out; suffer. Betid. Passed away. Bettering. Making one thing appear better than another. Bevis. Traditionally, a knight of Southampton who overcame the giant Ascapart. Bewitched. Supposed to be under a witch's influence ; a common interpretation of eccentric conduct. In former days — even less than a century ago — the assumption that a person was bewitched, too often formed an excuse for the maltreatment of an old woman or presumed sorceress. Bewrayed. Betrayed. Bezonian. A poor wretch. From the Italian bisogna — want, need — or the French besoin, with the same signification. The question propounded by Pistol in Henry JV, sec- ond part, is from an old play current in Shakespeare's time. 2 18 Bias. A weight placed on one part of a bowl to incline it in a given direction. That part of the bowl was called "the eye." The Chinese use the bias in one of their most popular toys. Bias-cheek. Swelling out. Bid. To invite. Bid-the-base. To challenge. Bifold. Twofold. Biggin. A corruption of Beguine — a head-band of coarse cloth worn by the nuns of that Order. Bilbekky. The whortleberry. Bilboa. A town in Spain, on the northern coast, where cul- prits worked on sea or land in fetters — whence called Bilboes. Bin, v. " Is." The word occurs in the beautiful song in Cymbeline : " Hark ! hark ! the lark at Heaven's gate sings, And Phoebus 'gins arise, s|c :£ ?le $ $ With everything that pretty bin ; My lady sweet, arise." Bibnam wood. Not many years since there still stood the trunk of an old oak on the site of the wood in Scotland made famous in Shakespeare's Macbeth. Where Shakes- peare got the idea of an army moving like a forest, be- cause the soldiers carried boughs and branches of the trees, is not traceable. There is a passage, however, in the Gospel according to St. Mark, which may have suggested the notion : The blind man says, (v. 24, chap, viii,) "I see men as trees walking." Bisson. Blind. Bit. "A half-checked bit " — an imperfect article in a horse's gear. In the speech of JBiondello, (Taming of the Shrew,) in which the word occurs, a description is given of Petruchids wedding attire, which corresponds exactly with the words of the old ballad of "Abraham Bradley." Bite. Cut with a sword. Bite my thumb. The lower order of Italians had, and may still have, a practice of indicating their hostility to one another by putting the end of the right thumb between the teeth and jerking it out at their adversary. 19 Black Monday. The name given to Easter Monday, 1350, an exceptionally dark, misty, and cold day in England. The chronicles say that many persons were killed by the phenomenal severity of the temperature. Blacks. O'er dyed, alluding to cloths. Blames. Faults. Blank. The white spot in a target commonly called "the bull's eye ;" also, signatures that might be attached to documents avowing a responsibility. Richard II adopted this scheme when he wanted money. Blanks. Blenches ; blanches ; turns white. Blank and level, v. Mark and aim; an old term in military gunnery. Blaze. To make public. Blazon. "Eternal blazon." The Ghost, in Hamlet, is pre- sumed to have seen in the nether world (purgatory) sights of a terrible character, similar to those described in the Inferno of Dante ; and it is those eternal " secrets of the prison house " to which the spectre refers as cal- culated, in description, to freeze the blood of the listener. Blazoney. The objects forming the shield of a coat of arms. Bleak, v. To deceive. Bleeding rings. The sockets of gouged eyes, (ITing Lear.) Blench. To turn pale ; become blanch, (white ;) to fly off ; shift ; change. Blent. Blended. Blind worm. The ccecilia, or slow worm. Blood, ad. Ancestry ; relationship ; consanguinity. " The part I had in Gloster's blood " {Richard II) means the degree of family relationship in which I stood towards him. Also, passion; impulse; feeling. "Our bloods no more obey the heavens " ( Cymbeline) is tantamount to the expression there is no sympathy between us and Nature. " My blood has been too cold and temperate " is Henry IV ] s avowal of a toleration of indignity. " In blood," applicable to a deer in good condition. Blood-boltered. Smeared with blood. Bloody flag. A signal of war. Blown. Puffed up ; swollen ; a grateful emotion. " This. generosity blows my heart." 20 Blows. Swells ; n., Blue Caps, (the Scotch.) Blue bottle eogue. An old nickname for a parish officer of police. The dress of that functionary of the Protestant Church, the beadle, is still a blue-cloth gown, or long coat, but he has ceased to be a public executioner. His duties are confined to the preservation of order during the church service, and the principal objects of the bea- dle's wrath are the troublesome boys of a village. Blue caps, or blue bonnets. The national Scottish head- dress. Blunderbuss. A gun with a barrel of large calibre, expand- ing at the muzzle to the dimensions of a trumpet bell, that the shot may be more widely scattered. Blunt. Stupid ; insensible. Blurt. An expression of contempt. Boar's head. The crest of the House of York. As a com- pliment to the dominant family, it was employed as the sign of a small inn in Eastcheap. London, to which Prince Henry and his companions were accustomed (see Henry IV) to resort. Bob. To filch ; swindle. Bodge. To move ; retreat. From bouger, Fr. Bodged. Botched ; clumsily performed ; boggled. Bodkin. A poniard. Bohemia. Shakespeare has made the grand mistake of plac- ing this country on the sea-shore of Italy. Boitier vert. (Fr.) A green box. Bolingbroke. The birthplace of Henry Plantagenet, after- wards Henry IV. He bears the title of " Earl Boling- broke " in Richard II Bolt, v. To sift ; thresh ; winnow ; refine ; n., a short, thick arrow, used in archery with the cross-bow. A thunder- bolt, as applicable to a destructive flash of lightning. Aerolites w T ere supposed, by the heathen Greeks, to be fragments of the bolts shot by Jove as the expression of his displeasure. Bolts. Fastenings. When they are said to be " correspon- sive and fulfilling," they fit in their sockets. Bolter. One who smears, daubs, &c. Bolting hutch. The receptacle for sifted meal. 21 Bolting cloth. The sieve used for separating flour from bran. Bombard, v. To throw bombshells into a town, encampment, or ship for destructive purposes ; n., a huge barrel or leather bottle for beer or wine. Bombast. The cotton wadding of a dress. Bona roba. A strumpet ; a fine wench. Bona terra, mala gens. (Lat.) Good land, but bad people. Bond. Bounden duty. Bonnet, n. A covering for the head — the hat of the period. The removal of the bonnet from the head has for a long period been an act of courtesy and reverence in Euro- pean countries and their colonies. The obsequiousness of the courtier, Osrie, (ITamlet,) is illustrated in his persistent refusal to put his bonnet to its " right uses " when urged to do so by the Prince Osrie s readiness to admit that it is hot or cold, according to Hamlets varied assertion, is akin to the sycophancy of Polonius, who can see a weasel or a whale in the clouds, just as Samlet whimsically suggests. The verb " to bonnet " means "to salute," and it was one of the privileges ac- corded to noblemen who had achieved distinction that they were permitted to stand " unbonnetted " in the presence of the monarch. Bonny, or Bonnie. Pretty. A Scotticism. Bonos dies. Good days ! Book. A contract. Boot. Profit ; something extra. Bootless. Useless. Boots. An instrument for squeezing the leg ; an ingenious piece of torture, used, like the rack, as part of the peine forte et dure, employed to extort confession from a prisoner suspected of a crime, or supposed to have un- discovered accomplices. The word " boots " was some- times used for " bootless." It likewise signified a rustic, humorous punishment at harvest time. Bore. Demeaned. Bores. Stabs. Bosky. Bushy ; covered with trees and shrubs. 22 Bosom-wish. Heart's desire. " Milk white bosom " is an al- lusion to the little pockets which ladies in the 15th and 16th centuries wore in the upper part of a dress. Boss'd. Embossed. Botch. A patch. Bots. Worms in a horse. Bottled-spidee. Bloated. Bottle of hay. A measure which contained from two to five pounds weight of hay ; a sufficiency for a horse's meal. It is in reference to this measure that the difficulty of finding a needle in the hay is suggested. " Pottle " has the same meaning as "bottle" in this sense. Bottom. The cylindrical basis of a skein or spool of thread made by weavers. Hence, the just application of the name to the pompous artificer in A 31idsummer Night's Dream. In Act IV, Scene I, Bottom says he has a "reasonable good ear in music." The weavers in the 16th century were mostly Calvinists, addicted to " psalm singing." Falstaff {Henry IV) refers to their capa- bility in that respect — "I would I were a weaver; I could sing psalms." Bottoms. A nautical term for ships. A written acknowledg- ment for a loan of money on the security or mortgage of a ship is called " a bottomry bond." Bourne. A boundary ; a limit ; a rivulet. When applied to the latter, in Scotland or the north of England, it is called a bum. A " chalky-bourne " describes the white cliffs of old England. Bow, n. One of Cupid's weapons which discharged an arrow as effectively as that of a Turk or Tartar ; v., a reveren- tial act ; n., as applied to an ox, a yoke. Bowstrings. "Hold or cut bowstrings " was probably a piece of slang, and meant: "If you cannot continue to play or shoot, you had better cut the strings of your fiddle or your bow." Box. A coffin. The word is used in that sense by Hamlet in the graveyard. Boy queller. A murderer of boj^s. Brabbler, A brawler; a hound that gives tongue inoppor- tunely. 23 Brabe. An expression of scorn. Brace. Armor for the arm ; a style of defence. Brach. A dog used in hunting. Brack. To salt. Braggardism. Excess of praise ; boastfulness. Braid. Crafty ; deceitful. Brain, v. Break a design, or a man's head. Brains-flow. Tears. Brake. A thicket ; a rough brake ; a thicket of thorns. " The brake of vice" was a species of rack used for the torture of prisoners who would neither confess nor deny a crime, nor implicate others. Brands. A part of the andirons which supported the logs in a fireplace. Brass. " To live in brass " is to have the name, rank, and good qualities of a deceased individual engraved in brass and set into the marble which forms the tomb- stone or mural memorial. Brave. To defy ; to bully. Bravely. Gallantly ; gaily ; splendidly ; proudly. Bravery. Finery. Brave-bears. An allusion to the supporters of the coat-of- arms of the Earl of Warwick. Brawl. A species of stately dance borrowed from the French. Brawn. The arm ; a coarse appellation for a woman. Break, v. To broach or introduce a subject in conversation ; also, to violate a compact or obligation. The failure to meet an engagement at a given date was called " break- ing the day.'' Break with. To communicate with a person ; confide in him. Break up. Break open. Breast- voice. The voce de petto, (Ital.,) or voice from the chest ; a distinguishing feature in musical vocalization. Breath, v. To exercise ; (also, see Suffrage.) Breathed. Inured by constant practice. Brecknock. In Wales — the locality of the castle of the Duke of Buckingham, (cetat Richard III.) Breeched. Foully sheathed ; mired ; whipped. Breeching school boy. Liable to be breeched. Breedbate, or breed debate. The cause of a quarrel. 24 Breeding minds. Men of evil conceptions. Brentford. An old town, a few miles from London, where once abode an ancient female fortune-teller who kept an inn. Bretagne Richmond. After the battle of Tewkesbury the Earl of Richmond, afterwards Henry VII, took refuge in the court of Francis, Duke of Bretagne. Brewer's bucket. A beer barrel slung on a pole or gibbet. Bribe-buck. A haunch of venison sent by the owner of a deer park as a present and mark of favor — often in the nature of gratitude for services to be performed. Bridge, v. To retreat. Brief. A small written note ; a programme, syllabus, or list. Briefly. Quickly. Bring in! The phrase anciently used in taverns when calling on the tapster or drawers for drink. Brize. The hornet or gadfly. Broach. To transfix ; place on a spit for roasting. From the French word broche, a spit. Also, to introduce a sub- ject in conversation. Brock. The badger. Brogues. Shoes, or half boots. Broils, ad. Heated by vociferous approbation. " He broils a loud applause." n. The word likewise signifies street quarrels. Broke. A pander. Broken music. A humorous comparison to an instrument like the Panspipe or " mouth organ," which resembles in the order of the pipes one side of the human ribs. Brooch. An ornament of any kind. Brooched. Adorned with brooches. Brook. "Flying at the brook." Hawking for water fowl. Broom groves. A collection of leguminous plants common in Scotland. Brought. Attended. Brown bill. A battle-axe — probably a cant name for the color of the handle, as " Brown Bess " became the appellation of a soldier's musket. Brownest. A disciple of a sectarian named Brown, who op- posed Protestantism in the sixteenth century. 25 Bkuited. Reported. Buck. The male deer ; at the first year a fawn ; dirty linen. Buckle. Bind ; fasten ; engage ; fight with ; to yield. Buckler. A shield or target of the commonest kind. Bucklersbury. A narrow street in the heart of the city of London, where chemists and druggists abode. The ref- erences in Romeo and Juliet, and Merry Wives of Windsor to simples, demonstrate the backward state of pharmacology in Shakespeare's time. Buckwashing. Washing a tubful of foul linen. Budger. A stirrer; from "to budge — move." Buff- jerkin. A jacket or doublet of undressed leather ; buff from boeuf, Fr. , (ox. ) It was probably used to restrain vio- lent prisoners or lunatics. Bug. In Shakespeare's time, and its antecedent, this word meant more than the common house-bug, the cimex lee- tuarius. It was abridged from "bugaboo" — an imagi- nary object supposed to be capable of terrifying weak- minded people. The word bugbear — a false alarm — doubtless was derived from the same source. Bulk, or bulk-head, or bulwark. A projection from a wall intended to strengthen a building ; a buttress. Bullet-grazing. The ricochet or rebound of a ball or bullet. Bully. This term, of frequent use among the lower orders of the middle ages, was not applied or meant offensively, but rather the reverse, as expressive of somebody ad- mired or respected. "Bully" Bottom, {Midsummer Night's Dream;) "Bully Rook," {Merry Wives of Windsor;) the " lovely Bully," {Henry J 7 ",) are exam- ples in point. Bumbard. (See Bombard.) Bung. A cut-purse ; thief ; also the aperture of a cask. Bunting. A field-bird, like the lark in form and color, but in- ferior as a songster. The reference to the bunting in "AIVs Well that Ends WelV was one of many proofs of Shakespeare's familiarity with British birds. Bur, or burr. The prickly head of a certain field-plant — the burdock. The word is used by Shakespeare to illustrate the fact of its adherence to any woollen cloth, &c, with which it may come into contact. Rosalind {As You 3 26 Like It) refers to it as a peculiar defect in the larynx, impeding speech if a certain accumulated phlegm is not expectorated or hemmed away. There are "burs" at her heart which she would remove if she could hem ! and have him, {Orlando.) In the county of Northumberland the "bur" is peculiar to the vocal organs, and is called "the Newcastle bur," caused, doubtless, by the coal smoke rife in the city. Burgonet, or burgenet. A helmet profusely embellished with the features of a Gorgon, frightful to behold. Burton heath. A village in Warwickshire. Bush. Literally, (from the Saxon,) a wood or forest. In Aus- tralia the term is employed to distinguish the wilder- ness, to which lawless men betake themselves, from the populous towns and cities. In a more limited and common application, " bush " means a single shrub or stunted tree. In an isolated position it formed the altar before which " hedge priests " — a sort of unlicensed Christian ministers — were wont to perform the marriage rites among rustics, whence it came to be called a "Beg- gar's bush." Beaumont & Fletcher wrote a play with that title ; and Jaques {As You Like It) asks Touch- stone wiry he thinks of marrying Audrey "under a bush, like a beggar." Touchstones object is avowedly sinister — the ceremony being unlawful, the nuptial tie could the more easily be loosened. In the phrase, "Good wine needs no bush," (to which Rosalind alludes in the epilogue,) another rendering of the word is conveyed. A shrub, or bunch of grape- vine or ivy, suspended over the door or upon the outer wall of an inn, was understood to announce that the land- lord sold good wine. The sign is still visible in many of the hostelries of the public roads of France. But might it not be inferred from the presence of " the bush " that " mine host " sells bad wine % Buskined. The act of wearing a buskin, or short boot, an ancient appendage to tragic actors and athletes. Hip- poly ta, wife of Theseus, {Midsummer NigMs Dream,) is called the "buskined mistress," because, as an Ama- zon, her habits and pursuits were masculine. 27 Buss. To kiss. From the Latin basio. Butcher's cue. Cardinal Wolsey, to whom this epithet ap- plies, was the son of a butcher. Buttery bar. The dairy. Sir Andrew Ague-cheek (Twelfth Night) is invited to let his hand drink there, " for 'tis dry." Butt-shaft. An arrow wherewith to shoot at butts. Buttock of the night. Late hours. Buxom. Obedient ; gay ; brisk ; lusty ; rampant. Buzzard. A degenerate hawk ; a blockhead. By'r lady. " By our lady ;" " by'r lakin ;" by our little lady. A common form of adjuration in Roman Catholic times, when the holy mediatrix, the Virgin, was (as she still is among Papists) invoked in reverent fashion. By it. Aby it ; suffer for it. c Cable. Latitude in action. " Give him rope enough." — Pro- verb. Cacodemon. An evil spirit. Caddis. A species of worsted galloon ; a kind of shoddy. Cade. A cask of salt herrings. Cadent. Falling. Cadmus. The person who introduced Greece to letters ; the founder of a city ; a hunter ; the destroyer of a dragon. Hyppolyta, the Amazon, wife of Theseus, (Midsummer Night 's Dream,) says she was with Cadmus and Her- cules when they bayed a bear in Crete. Caduceus. A wand of great power carried by Mercury. Cadwal. Brief for Cadwallader, a Welsh name. Caesar. (See Julius Cjesar.) Cage. A prison of wood for the confinement of drunkards, rioters, and thieves, in villages. Cain colored. In some old tapestries Cain was represented with red hair and beard. There is nothing in Scripture as authority for the complexion of the first fratricide, but as he was red-handed it may have occurred to the Italian painters to give him a sanguinary hue. Or may not " cain " be intended for " cane," which is yellow ? 28 Caitiff. A term of contempt which originally meant nothing- more than captive, as we may see in WicklinVs transla- tion of the Scriptures. WicklifYe's contemporary, the father of English poetry, has in the " Knight's Tale :" " And now I am so catif and so thral that he that is my mortal enemy I serve him as his squier pourely." And Chaucer's immediate predecessor, William Langiand, au- thor of Piers' " Plowman's Vision," writes of " Chille and caytif poverte." The word very soon began to show the impress of an instinctive conviction that slavery breaks down the moral character and induces a base, abject disposition ; for only a hundred years after Chau- cer's death we find the Scotch bishop, Gawin Douglas, (famous for having given to the world the first metrical translation of any ancient classics in his translation of Virgil's "iEneid,") writing of the ' ' Grete outrage to strange Enee In his absence thus catifely to fle." The etymological distinction between "captive" and "caitiff" is that the first is taken directly from the Latin, and, the latter indirectly from the same through the me- dium of the French chetif or Italian eattivo. Cake's dough. A failure, as an ill-baked cake. Calculate. To foretell. Calendar. A chronological record of human events and as- tronomical changes. Calipolis. A character in the old play of "The Battle of Al- cazar." Caliver. A hand-gun. Call. To visit. Callet. A common scold ; a beggar's wife. Callini custora me. A line from an old Irish (Celtic) ditty. Calling. Profession ; trade ; appellation. Calm. Qualm. Calphurnia. The wife of Julius Caesar. Calydon. By the " Prince's heart of Calydon " is meant Me- leager, the story of whose exploits in destroying the Calydonean boar is told by Homer, Ovid, and others. Camblet. An inferior kind of cloth. Cambria. The ancient (Boman) name of Wales. 29 Cambyses. An imaginary Persian sovereign ; the hero of a play by one Preston. King Cambyses is represented as a person of violent passion, whose eyes are, therefore, red. Camelot. A marsh in the west of England resorted to by geese. * * " The land of Cameliard was waste, Thick with wet grass." — Tennyson. It was the place where, tradition says, King Arthur held his court. Again referring to the locality, Tennyson says: * * " The gardens and the halls Of Camelot, as in the days that were." Can. To know. A Scotch word, usually spelt " ken." Canary. A dance ; likewise a wine from the Canaries. Candle-holders. Before chandeliers, girondoles, &c, came into fashion, the lights at festivals, dances, &c, were candles and torches, held by men. Candle mire. An accumulation of tallow. Candle wasters. People who sit up at night to carouse. Canis, or Canus. (Lat.) A dog. Cankers. Worms in a plant. The canker blossom is called the dog rose. Cannakin. A small drinking vessel. Canon. A law ; a rule ; a clerical functionary. Canonize. To bless ; pray for ; inter with religious solemnity ; enrol among the saints. Cansonet. A short song. From chansons, (Fr.,) songs. Canstick. Abbreviation of candle- stick. Cantle. A fragment ; a slice. Cantons. Cantos • parts of a poem. Canvas. To sift ; search. From the Fr. canabesser. Canvas climber. A sailor. Canvass. To beat soundly. Cap. The top ; the chief ; v., to salute by removing the hat. (See Bonnet " of time," foremost in the fashion.) Capable. Capacious. Capable impressure. Indenture ; hollow mark. Cap-a-pied. From head to foot. Caper. A motion in dancing; to "cut a caper" was a proof of a genteel education. 30 Capitol. The Capitolium of ancient Eome. Shakespeare has chosen this locality for the scene of the murder of Julius Csesar. But the deed was really done in Pom- pey's theatre, at the foot of the statue of Pompey. Capitulate. To make head against ; agreement to combine ; to surrender ; to form a chapter. Capocchia. (Ital.) A simpleton. Capon. Metaphorically, a love letter. Capriccio. (Ital.) Caprice. Capricious. Lascivious. Caps, (Monmouth.) The city of Monmouth had a good repu- tation as a factory of caps. Captious. Capacious. Captivate. To capture. Car. To plough. Carac, or Karrack. A Spanish galleon, so called from cara- coa, a barge, or carino, freight. Caracts. Characters. Carat. A weight of four ounces, used by goldsmiths and jewellers to estimate the value of deposits in gold. Carbonade, v. To cut or hack. Carbonado, n. A meat cutlet. Carbuncle, n. A stone of a ruby red ; ad., protuberant ; an- gry ; afflicted with scarlet sores. Carcanet. A necklace. Card, v. To "speak by the card" was to speak literally, by rule ; matter of fact ; n., the shipman's card, the chart or compass. Carded. Mixed; debased. Cardinal. Chief; pre-eminent. Some scholars derive the word from cardo, "hinge," because the Papacy is always understood to hang or turn upon the choice of the College of Cardinals. Cardinally. Carnally. Cardus benedictus. An herb of healing property. Care. Inclination. Careful. Anxious ; full of cares. Career. The meeting or crossing of lances in a tournament. Careire. The curvetting of a horse. Caret. (Lat.) " There are wanting." 31 Carines. Bardolph is either blundering through some at- tempt to apply the verb careo, "to want," or "be in want," or indulging in a slang phrase of the age. . Carl, or carlot. A boor ; a peasant. Carlot. A peasant. Carnal. Sanguinary. Carowses. Drinking bouts. Carp. To rally ; argue ; criticise ; object ; draw nice distinc- tions. Carpet-consideration. Knighted in a chamber, in contradis- tinction to the higher honor of being knighted on the field of battle. Carraway. A seed formerly eaten at dessert, and still used to flavor pastry. Carriage. Deportment ; conduct. Carried. Conducted. Carrion. Dead flesh converted into maggots by the sun's rays. Carry. To prevail with ; conquer ; overcome. Cart. A carriage. Carthage queen. Hermia {Midsummer JSTigMs Dream) swears by the funeral pile on which Dido is said to have stabbed herself (earning thereby the appellation of " val- iant woman") in her misery caused by the departure of iEneas. Shakespeare, in this, has adopted the popular anachronism which makes the Tunisian lady contempo- rary with iEneas, whereas scholars and poets assign her an antiquity 300 years greater than that of iEneas. Carve. Performing the office of carving at the table was a compliment to guests. Carved-bone. A cameo formed of the bones of animals or fishes ; an ornament of great antiquity. Case. The eye socket ; skin ; outward garb ; v., to cover ; con- ceal. "On with your visors," i. e., hide your faces. Case or lives. A set of lives. Cask. A casket. Casque. A helmet. Cassibelan. The ancient Briton named in the Roman records " Cassibelaunus." 32 Cassius. The " lean and hungry " Caius Cassius was a pecu- liar object of Julius Caesar's dislike and suspicion. Caesar rejects with disdain the supposition that he was liable to fear, but when he tells Marc Antony to pass to his right side, on the pretence that he is deaf of the left ear, he evidently wishes to place Marc Antony between himself and the risk of assassination. Cassock. An overcoat worn by horsemen in the nature of a tabard. Cast. To calculate ; analyze. " Cast the waters of my land — find her disease," {Macbeth.) To cast beyond oneself is to look far off. To be discharged ; superseded. Castilian. An offensive term of Spanish (Castile) origin, derived from contempt for the people of Castile, although it was then a kingdom. " Gastiliano vulgo " is an ex- pression of contempt. Castle. A kind of close helmet. Catain. A thief ; a native of Cathay, (China.) Cataplasm. A plaster wherewith to raise a gentle blister. Cates. Provision ; nice food : dainties. Cattings. Cat-guts ; harp strings, originally supposed to have been formed from the entrails of cats — whence the com- mon phrase " cat-gut." Cautel. A corner or piece of anything ; deceit. Cautelotts ; crafty ; ultra cautious. Cavalero. Cavalier ; chevalier ; knight ; " sir knight." Caveto. From the Latin caveo, be on your guard ; take heed. Caviar. The roe of the sturgeon, much eaten as a preserve or pickle by the people on the Russian shores of the Baltic. The expense of the article, when imported into other nations, necessarily confines its use to the higher orders of society ; whence Hamlet' 's remark that a good thing- is "caviar to the general" — the multitude. Cease. Decease ; to stop, or cause to be stopped. Censure, v. To rebuke ; blame ; condemn ; pass sentence ; n. 3 criticism ; opinion ; judgment ; rebuke. Centre. The middle of the earth, or of any circumference. Century. One hundred of anything — men, animals, articles, years. Cere, v. To close up with wax. 33 Cekements. Cere cloth ; the waxed cloths with which it was the custom to envelop the dead. Ceremonies. Auguries ; omens. Certes. Certainly. Cess. Measure ; assessment. Chafe. Heat; anger. Chaffless. Bare ; modest. Chafing. Rubbing. Chair. Throne. Chair days. Days of rest. Chaliced. Flowers, cup-formed. Challenge. A term in law; the option of objecting to a juror. Cham. Benedick {Much Ado About Nothing) speaks of a hair of the Cham's beard. This points to the Khan of Tartary. Marco Polo, Chardin, and other early travel- lers in the East, always wrote Cham for Khan, as that is the French method of spelling and pronouncing the title. In all likelihood Shakespeare was not aware of the true pronunciation of the word, as he had only seen it in print. Chamber. An old legal name for London — Camera Regis — literally, the "king's chamber;" also, a piece of ord- nance, but now confined to describe parts of a cannon. Chamberer. A plotter; intriguer. Chamberlain. A male servant at an inn who had charge of the chambers — a duty now confined to women; chamber- maids; also, a city official, but, with the prefix "Lord," a Court officer. Chameleon's dish. The minute insects which form the food of the lizard are so invisible to the naked eye that the animal is vulgarly supposed to live on air. Chance. Fortune. Changeling. A child stolen in infancy and substituted by another. In A Midsummer JVigMs Dream there is clearly a discrepancy between PucKs description of the Indian child possessed by Titania and that which Titania herself gives. Puck says it was stolen from an Indian king, but Titania declares that the child's mother, " being mortal, of the boy did die," and for her sake, for they were friends, the fairy queen " reared up the boy." 34 Channel. Kennel; gutter. Chanson. A song. " Pious chansons " were much in vogue in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Hymns, carols, and songs, turning upon the incidents in the New Tes- tament, were and are popular in all Roman Catholic countries. Chantry. A small chapel in a cathedral where the mass, or other service, was intoned. Chape. A hook by which a sword or dagger was suspended to the person. Chapeless. Devoid of a chape. Chapman. A broker, in fact, but the word was equally appli- cable to buyers and sellers on their own account. The glibness of the chapman's tongue was proverbial. Chaeact. Affected ; quality. Character, ad. Disposition ; temperament ; morale ; written description ; v., to describe. The illiterate English and Irish lay the accent in pronunciation on the second or penultimate syllable, as character. Shakespeare like- wise gives it in the same way as a verb. Charactery. Letters ; cause ; features of a troubled mind. Chares. Common duties ; drudgery ; patches of work. Charge-house. A free school. Charges. Condition : expense. Chariest. Most cautious. Chariness. Caution. Charitable. Dear; honorable, as contrasted with wicked. "Be thy intents wicked or charitable." (Hamlet.) Charles the emperor was Charles V of France, Spain, &c. Charles' wain. A corruption of churls' wain or wagon ; the name was given by rustics to the Pleiades, (in Ursa 3Iajor,) on account of their peculiar collective form, resembling a team. Charm, v. To enchant ; entreat ; elicit. Charmer. A sorceress ; a female magician ; one who sold " charms " to fools who believed in their efficacy as a life preserver. Charming words. Words that are literally enchanted. Charms. Amulets ; talismans ; instruments of witchery. Charneco. A sweet wine. Charter. Privilege. 35 Charters. The " blank charters " mentioned in Richard II were a mock kind of exchequer bill with which the King's officers obtained money from rich people. They were often converted into bonds and obligations to pay certain sums. Chary. Cautious ; modest. Chases. Matches at tennis. Chaudron. The entrails of an animal. Cheater . Short of escheater ; an officer of the exchequer ; also, a thief. Check. Reproof ; in falconry, the refusal of a hawk to fly at a bird which is not its proper game. Cheek by jole, or jowl. A rustic form of expressing juxta- position. Cheer, v. To comfort ; welcome ; applaud ; n., good food ; a joyful cry; at?., approbation; encouragement; good looks. From the Fr. chere. Cherry-pit. A game played with cherry stones. Cherub. A child angel. Cherubim in the plural. Cheveril. A kid, from whose skin gloves are made. The word is from the French chevreuil. Chew. Ruminate ; reflect. Chewet. A bird of the daw tribe, addicted to perpetual chattering. Chide. To resound ; echo ; reprove. Chiding. The music of a pack of hounds in full cry after the game. Chien. (Fr.) Le chien est retourne a son propre vomissement. "The dog has returned to his own vomit." Childe. A knight ; a hero ; a youth. Childing. Unseasonably pregnant ; also, fruitful. Chill. " I shall." In using this word Edgar, in King Lear, is affecting to speak the patois of western England. Chirurgeon. A surgeon. Choice-spirits. Fiends who abode in the north of Europe. Choose. Having or not having a choice. " I cannot choose but weep," i. e., I cannot help weeping. Chop. To change. Chopine. A high-heeled shoe. Chopping. Jabbering. 36 Chorus. A personage of the ancient Greek and Roman drama, whose office it was to interpret the story of a play and describe the action which did not pass in view of the audience. He was, in fact, the connecting link of the incidents, a comprehension of which was necessary to the continuance of an interest in the representation. The best imitation of this agency will be found in Henry V and in the part of Gower, in Pericles. Chough. A chattering bird of the daw species. Shakespeare knew the birds and wild fowl, and knew them perhaps as a hunter as well as a poet. At least this passage would indicate as much : "As wild geese that the creeping fowler eye, Or rmset-pated choughs, many in sort, Rising and cawing at the sun's report, Sever themselves and madly sweep the sky." In calling the choughs " russet-pated," he makes the bill tinge the whole head, or perhaps gives the effect of the bird's markings when seen at a distance ; the bill is red, the head is black. Christendom. The whole realm of Christianity; also, the ceremony of baptism in christenings. Christianity. The innumerable references to Christian doc- trine, and the frequent insistance upon following the precepts of the Saviour throughout the plays treating of modern life, must carry conviction to the mind of every patient and candid reader that Shakespeare had a pure and devout faith in the principles inculcated in the New Testament. He adopted Christianity in the widest . acceptation of the term. Perhaps he did not belong to auy one of the denominations formed in his day. He was evidently too settled and pure in his creed — too catholic in his love of his species — to have embraced either of the narrow systems of church government which have rent society asunder, all over the world, since Luther preached and Henry VIII plundered and abolished the monasteries. It is quite certain he could not have been a Papist, or he would not have put into King Johns mouth the reproach and defiance addressed to Cardinal Pandulph when he apostrophizes John re- specting the suspension of Layton, chosen Archbishop 37 of Canterbury. Neither, as a Roman Catholic, would he have brought into so much prominence the vices and in- firmities of Wolsey and Beaufort, Archbishop Scroop, and the Bishop of Winchester. He would also have been more sparing of the reputation of the monks. He might have been a Protestant of the established church, for he makes the clergy of that denomination very respectable guides of men and members of society. Sir Hugh .Evans' Christian utterances, in the Merry Wives of Windsor, are perfectly orthodox, though his oddities and pedant- ries are unsparingly ridiculed. Sir Nathaniel is unex- ceptionally righteous ; but Sir Oliver Mar-text (As You Like It) is justly denounced as a quack. " Get you to church," quoth Jaques to Touchstone, " and have a good priest that can tell you what marriage is ; this fellow will but join you together as they join wainscot; then one of you will prove a shrunk panel, and, like green timber, warp, warp.' 1 Shakespeare, however, did not consider the clergy altogether free from hypocrisy, for he makes the Clown, in Twelfth Night, say : " I will dis- semble myself in the priestly gown, and I would I were the first that ever dissembled in such a gown." But true godliness he invariably favors. The "good divine " that follows his own instructions is everywhere spoken of with profound respect ; Christian precepts are introduced and inculcated on all convenient occasions, and the truths of revealed religion are unreservedly pronounced. Allud- ing to the absurd utterances of Malvolio, in Twelfth Night, Maria exclaims : " No Christian that means to be saved by believing rightly can ever believe such im- possible passages of grossness." The saving quality of faith in the Redeemer is here distinctly enunciated. But, indeed, the acceptance of Christian doctrine and a rev- erence for the actions of the Saviour of men occur in almost every play which does not turn upon the events in pagan Greece and Rome. Henry IV, referring to an intended crusade in Palestine, mentions " the blessed cross " under which he proposes to chase the pagans on the holy fields over which walked the " blessed feet that were nailed for our advantage on the bitter cross." 38 Henry VI, at the bedside of Cardinal Renufort, im- plores him to hold up his hand "in signal of his hopes of heaven's bliss." The cardinal "dies and makes no sign." Warwick, the earl, remarks that so bad a death argues a monstrous life ; whereupon Henry exclaims : "Forbear to judge, for we are sinners all." Henry V builds chan- tries, that sad and solemn priests " may sing for the soul" of Richard II ; and he has, he says, " on yearly pay five hundred poor, who twice a day hold their withered hands up to Heaven, praying God to pardon blood." The practice of knolling to church with holy bell re- ceives respectful recognition, (As Y~ou Like It.) Portia {Merchant of Venice) does not forget the prayer for mercy offered up in the sermon on the Mount. The Doctor, in Macbeth, calls upon God "to forgive us all." Macduff prays the pious Edward, the holy King, (Ed- ward the Confessor,) to help Scotland in her extremity,, "with Him above to ratify the work." In Hamlet we find an allusion to the Christian anniversary, and the Prince, at the sight of his father's ghost, invokes the protection of "angels and ministers of grace." And where do we find a more pregnant reference to immor- tality than in the glorious soliloquy on the folly and wickedness of a suicidal act as an escape from the " ills we have?" In Othello, where human vices and weak- nesses are the dominant features of the play, we find Desdemo7ta calling upon the Lord to have " mercy on her soul," and Othello himself, with crude notions upon the subject, nevertheless reverences Christian doctrine. In Richard III the Duke of Gloster seeks the aid of two clergymen " as props of virtue for a Christian prince." In Richard II the Bishop of Carlisle is spoken of as a clergyman of holy reverence, and the bishop, in his turn, alludes to Norfolk as fighting for Jesus Christ " in glorious Christian field, strewing the ensign of the Christian cross." And does not Cardinal Wolsey, at the close of his career, declare that he had better have displayed zeal in the service of the Almighty than in that of a king who had left him naked to his enemies ? But without dwelling further upon the direct and frequent 39 allusions to the doctrines of Christianity, we may find proofs in the plays of a recognition of the saving influ- ence of prayer and repentance. They are to be found in abundance. The King, in Hamlet, praying in his closet, offers a striking exemplification of these virtues: "Try what repentance can; what can it not?" Isabella, in Measure for Measure, pleads for mercy on her brother's behalf, and dwells on the efficacy of prayer. And many other instances may be traced incidentally scattered through the plays. But beyond all this, Nature (God's own works) receives the continual expression of Shakes- peare's homage to the Giver of all Good. He bids his readers find tongues in trees ; books in the running- brooks ; sermons in stones ; " good in everything." How eloquent is the Friar, in Romeo and Juliet, on the pow- erful grace that lies in herbs, stones, and their true qualities ! The whole universe, in fact, is made tributary to Shakespeare's efforts to instruct. And the pleasing mediums of romance and poetry are as often employed as the forms of didactic homilies to impart a feeling of godliness to the student. What more can or need be said? Chkistom. Mrs. Quickly means chrisom. A chrisom child is one that died within a month after its birth. The chrisom cloth was a white cloth put on at baptism and retained to be used, if necessary, as a shroud. Chronicle. To record ; to describe. Chuck. Chicken ; a term of endearment. Chuffs. Vulgar clowns ; misers ; fat men. Cicatrice. The scar left by a wound. Cicester. Corruption of "Chichester" in Sussex. Ciel ! (Fr.) Heaven! Cincture. A girdle. Cinna. (Helvetius.) There were several Cinnas, but Helve- tius being a friend of Cassius he is naturally the per- sonage of the name in Julius Gcesar. Cinque ports. Five ports on the Kentish coast of England under the special guard of a nobleman called "the warden." Cipher, v. To decipher. 40 Circe, n. A mythical enchantress who metamorphosed men into beasts. Circummured, ad. Enclosed by a circular wall. Circumstance, n. Argument ; conduct ; detail ; circumlocu- tion. Circumstanced, ad. Governed by circumstances. Cirum Circe. All round the circle. Cit l. Mention ; recital ; quotation. Cite. To incite. Cittern. A musical instrument. Civet. The foul flux of a cat which supplied a perfume much used at a period when chemical science had not evolved and condensed the odor of flowers. The smell must have been powerfully offensive. Cowper, the poet, writes : "I cannot talk with civet in the room, A fine puss gentleman that's all perfume. The sight's enough — no need to smell a beau. " Civil. Grave ; solemn ; human. A branch of the law dis- tinct from that applied to criminals. The initials LL. D. indicate a person who has obtained the degree of " doc- tor of civil law." ad., civilized. Civil, as applied to oranges, is a mistake for " Seville," in Spain, whence a certain acid class of oranges is exported. Civil monster. A man whose wife is faithless. Clack dish. Mendicants were accustomed to go about the streets with wooden dishes for the reception of broken meats, and they " clacked " the dishes to announce their presence to benevolent housekeepers. Clamorous. Dolorous ; noisy : demonstrative. Clamour. A term in bell-ringing ; a chime. Clamour- moistened. Noisy grief, accompanied by tears. Clap in. Fall to. Clap f the clout. To hit the mark in archery. Clapper-claw. A free use of the nails ; a woman's weapon in hostilities. Clasp. To clasp hands ; ratifying an agreement. Claw. To flatter. Clean- timbered. Symmetrically-shaped. Clear. Pure ; v., to purify ; absolve ; purge ; acquit. Clearest. Purest. 41 Clearness. Exemption ; not to be compromised. Cleft. Cove ; split. Cleft the roof. Split the heart with false vows, as one would cleave the mark in a target. Cleopatra. Queen of Egypt ; the daughter of one Ptolemy and the wife of another. The name of Cleopatra is Greek, and signifies "the glory of her country." Clepe. To call ; term ; name. Clept and yclept are indiffer- ently found in the oldest poets. Clerkly. Scholarly. Cliff. From clef, (Fr.) Key ; a note in music. The word in King Lear refers to a chalky height near Folkestone, on the coast of Kent, (England,) which is popularly called, because of its mention in the play, "Shakes- peare's cliff." Cling. To dry ; wither ; shrink up. Clinquant. (Fr.) Gay; gaudy; decorated with gold and silver. Clip. To embrace. Clipped. Enclosed ; debased, as of coin. Clock. Shakespeare has committed a mistake in assigning to Brutus {Julius Ccesar) the possession of a clock that struck the hours. The first clock of that kind was con- structed in the eleventh century, A. D., by a monk, the Abbot of Hirsham. Close. To agree with. Close exploit. A private deed. Clot, or clod poll. A heavy-headed rustic. Clout. A nail, (from the French clou;) also, the white cen- tral spot in a target, commonly called the bull's-eye. Clouted shoon, or brogues. Hob-nailed shoes or boots. Clown. Lexicographers assign several meanings to this term. A vulgar, ignorant rustic is called " a clown ;" and the same title is bestowed on a sharp-witted rascal, like the scaramuccio of the Italians. The clown of a circus or a modern pantomime is a mixture of the acrobat and the jester. He tumbles, he struts, he utters jokelets. The Cloum in Twelfth Night combines the qualities of the court-fool and the droll. He is, iniact, called "Feste, the jester ;" and in other dramas the clown's wit elevates him to the rank of the wearer of the cap and bells. 4 42 Clubs ! A cry for physical aid corresponding with the mod- ern appeal to the " police !" It was at one time the practice of shop-keepers to keep clubs in their shops for protection. Cnydus, or cnidus. Often misspelt, and pronounced " Cid- nus." The river on which Cleopatra made a grand dis- play {Antony and Cleopatra) in honor of Antony. Coach fellow. A comrade ; a confidant. Coals. To carry coals was deemed a degrading occupation. The calm endurance of an ignominy was likened to the operation. Coasting. Conciliating ; proceeding cautiously. Coasts and hedges. Insidious advances. Coat-of-arms. A term in heraldry denotative of the rank and descent of many knights and noblemen. The coat of Sir Thomas Luc}^ is made the subject of sundry sly allu- sions in the Merry Wives of Windsor. Sir Thomas is said to have punished Shakespeare's early transgression as a poacher on the justice's manor. The "luces" or coat-of-arms were, in fact, the fleurs-de-lis, (lilies,) but the word had likewise an offensive signification. Cob loaf. A crusty, uneven loaf of bread. Cock. A small boat (cock-boat) attached to a ship : also, the faucet or fixture by which the flood or stoppage of water from a pipe, or wine and beer from a barrel, is regulated. "A wasteful cock" is a figurative form of saying "I have opened the floodgates of my tears." — "The trumpet of the morn" — the chanticleer — which "proclaims the dawn." The idea, expressed in Hamlet, that on the eve of the anniversary of the birth of Jesus Christ the barn- door fowl singeth all the night long, was a tradition long- current in Catholic countries, and is not without war- ranty elsewhere. It has been heard by persons of credit in England, as well as Palestine, in recent years. Cock a hoop. A signal for a fight. Cock and pye. Some commentators allege that "cock" is a corruption of the sacred name of "God," and the "pye" a table in the old Eoman Catholic offices, showing how the service fixed for the day may be found. They add that " cock and pye " was a familiar oath until the 43 Elizabethan era. But for this elaborate exposition, plain readers would suppose that JPage, {Merry Wives of Windsor,) in the exuberance of his hospitality, was only swearing by the toothsome cates he proposed to offer his guests — possibly a roast capon and a venison pasty. He says, in fact, " they have a hot venison pasty to dinner." Page was not a Papist, and would hardly have been made to swear a Catholic oath. Cockatrice. The fabled Basilisk, with an evil eye, that could strike a person dead with a glance. Cockle. A corn weed ; " the cockle of rebellion " — the seed of a revolt ; tares or darn weed. Cockle hat. The hat of a pilgrim to which a cockle-shell was attached. Cockney. A cook. The word comes from the French cocag?ie, an imaginary land of luxury and idleness. Cock sure. Certain ; infallible. Cock shut- time. Twilight ; the time when nets were spread to snare woodcocks and fowls that go to roost. Cod. A pea or pea shell. Codding. Amorous. Codling. An unripe apple. Codpiece. A part of a man's costume. Coffin. The cavity of a raised pie. Cog. To cheat ; to lie. Cognizance. A mark ; a badge. Coigne. An angle of a building. Coil. Bustle ; stir ; tumult. Coin. (See Angel, Cross, Three Farthings, Tester, &c.) Colbrand. A Danish giant, said to have been overcome by the redoubtable Guy, Earl of Warwick. Cold. Naked. Collection. Drawing a conclusion. Collied. Blackened ; covered, as it were, with coal. Collier. Another name for a cheat. Colliers were notorious for giving short measure. Collop. A slice of flesh. Colorable. Specious. Colors. Frauds ; deceits ; disguises. Colour, or color. Argument ; false appearance. 4:4 Coloquintida. A bitter drug ; colocynth. Colt. To tease ; to cheat. Colted. Bidden ; possessed of a colt ; cheated. Comart. A joint bargain. Comate. Companion in exile or on a voyage ; a wife. Combine. To bind. Combination. Betrothal. Comeddled. Mingled. Comedy of errors. The Menocapone of Plautus appears to have provided the origin of this diverting play. Come off. To pay. Come of will. To succeed. Comfort. To aid ; abet ; give ease and peace to another. Comma. Connection. Commence. Put in operation. Commends. Recommends ; to commend oneself to another through a letter or a third person is equivalent to the transmission of friendly greetings. Commission. Authority. Commodity. Trade ; credit. Commonty. A comedy. Community. Frequency. Compact. Agreement ; put together ; composed. Companies. Companions ; good fellowship. Companion Originally used contemptuously, as " fellow, be- gone !" The word is now of opposite meaning. Compare. Comparison, when used as a noun. Comparative. A dealer in comparisons ; a punster ; open to comparison ; also, suitable compensation. Compassed. Round, as " compassed window ; " a bow window : " compassed cape," as, rounded the cape. Compassionate. Plaintive. Competitor. Confidant. Complement. Accomplishment ; decoration ; disguise. Complement extern. Outward display. Complexion. The use of this word in the Merchant of Ven- ice shows that the aversion of the white to the colored races was very strong three or four centuries ago. Mis- cegenation, on a large scale, will never be perpetrated while the antagonism of races prevail. It was not " a 45 good inspiration " on the part of Portia 's father to ex- pose his daughter to the risk of being compelled to marry a Moor. * * "Good my complexion!" an exclamation in As You Like It, may have had no more literal signification than " Bless my soul !" " Bless my heart alive !" — phrases of frequent modern utterance. Complices. Accomplices. Compliments. Regards. Comply. Handle carelessly ; to trifle with. Compose. To agree. Composition. Bargain ; consistency. Compostuke. Composition. Composuee. A combination. Compt. Account. Comptible. Submissive ; susceptible ; disposed to examine ; liable to be called to account. Con. Give ; study ; owe. Conclusions. Experiments. To " try conclusions " was a phrase for an encounter of wits or weapons. When Launcelot Gobbo {Merchant of Venice) says " confu- sions," which is the reading suggested by some annota- tors, he probably means the same thing, but utters a word more in accordance with his own comprehension of the context of language. Launcelot, like all the other characters in Shakespeare of the same class of life, talks a great deal of nonsense in the plenitude of his ignor- ance. Whether the frequent instance of the inversion of phrases was actually a feature of the colloquy of the common people, or a trick of Shakespeare's to raise a laugh at their expense, must remain a question. Log- berry, {Much Ado About Nothing ;) Capulefs servant, {Romeo and Juliet,) and others have the same habit of speech. Concavity. Depth ; a cave. Conceit. Imagination ; wit ; guess ; idea. Concealments. Wonderful secrets. Conceived to scope. Reaching the highest point of imagina- tion. Concent. Harmony of action. 46 Concert. Concerted harmony. Concupy. Concupiscence. Condition. Nature ; disposition ; profession. Conditioned. Well disposed ; generous ; noble. Condolement. Grief. Conduct. Escort ; a military term ; a conductor. Conduit. A channel formed for the distribution of water. Coney catching. Tricking ; poaching ; pilfering. Confect. To prepare as sweetmeats. Confession. Profession. Confines. Borders ; boundaries. Confineless. Boundless. Confiscate. To appropriate to State uses the private property of individuals who have violated the law. All smuggled goods, when seized, are confiscated, and the property of felons is similarly sequestrated. The pronunciation of this word in Shakespeare is regulated by the claims of euphony. Thus, in one passage in the Merchant of Venice it is necessarily pronounced con/jscate — the em- phasis being placed on the penultimate ; in another the stress falls on con, the first syllable. Confinees. Persons who stay at home and lead idle lives. Confound. Employ ; expend ; confuse ; trouble ; destroy in combat. Conge d. (Fr.) Taken leave, or conge. Congee. The sea eel. Congree. To agree. Congruent epitheton. An epithet agreeing with the subject in hand. Conject. Conjecture. Conjunction. Matrimonial engagement ; betrothal. Considerate stone. " I will be silent and only think." {Antony and Cleopatra.) Consign. To confirm ; sign ; seal. Consigned. Sealed. Consist. Insist; stand. Consistory. The assemblage of cardinals. Consonancy. Corresponding with equality. Consort, v. Associate with ; companionship. Conspectivity. Faculty of observation ; visual power. 47 Constancy. Consistency, as well as adherence to one love or one purpose. Constant. Firm of purpose. Constantly. Firmly. Constantinople. King Henry V. talks of taking the Turk by the beard at Constantinople, but the Turks did not occupy the city for thirty years after his death. Constee. To construe. Consuls. Statesmen in office exercising joint rule ; counsel- lors: The " toged consuls," referred to by lago, (Othello,) indicate senators in their robes. Contagion. Venomous ; poisonous. Contemptible. Synonymous with contemptuous. Continents. Banks of earth holdiog rivers in restraint. Continuance — continuate. Uninterruptedly. Continuation teem. An unbroken period. Conteaction. A marriage contract. Conteaeious. Different. Conteaey. Opposite to. The stress is sometimes laid on the middle^ syllable. Conteive. To conspire ; beguile ; assist. Con tutto il cuoee ben teovato. (Ital.) " With all my heart, right welcome." Conteol, v. To confute ; n., controlment ; punishment. Convent. Agree to or with. Convented. Convened ; summoned. Conveesion. Change of condition. Conveet. To change. Conveetite. A convert. Convey. To steal ; to pass oneself off as another. Conveyance. Trick; juggling; sleight of hand; putting away; murder. Conveyed himself. Derived his title. Convince. Overcome. Convicted. Baffled; overpowered. " A whole armada of con- victed sail is scattered by a roaring tempest." — King John. Convive. To be convivial ; n., a feast. Convocation. Congress ; assembly. Cooling caed. Metaphorically, an insurmountable obstacle. 48 Copatain hat. A hat with a conical crown. Cope. Encounter; covering. Cophetua. A king who fell in love with a beggar girl. Copie. Main part ; burthen or subject. Copped. Rising to a top or head. Copy. Theme; example. Coragio. (Ital.) Courage ! be of good cheer ! Cokal. Ariel, in the Tempest, says : " Of his bones is coral made." This is a mistake, even metaphorically. A pene- tration into the mysteries of the deep has shown that the coral polyps are beautiful marine insects. Coram. The presence. Coram judice. Before a judge. Coranto. A dance in which there was much running and leaping. Corinth. A brothel. The Corinth of ancient Greece was deemed the most licentious city of the time. Corinthian. A cant name for a dissolute person. Corky. Dry. Corner-cap. A corner-stone. Cornets. Troops of dragoons. Cornuto. (Ital.) A cuckold. Literally, a horned person. Corporal. Corporeal. Corollary. A surplus of anything ; a logical deduction from a fact or hypothesis. Corrigible. Corrected. Corrival. Opponent. Corrosive. Apt to decay. Corse. A corpse. Costard. A small apple. Coster monger. A dealer in costards. Cote, v. To overtake and accompany ; n., a cottage. Cotquean. A frivolous person ; an incontinent female. Cotsell. For Cotswold, in Gloucestershire, where coursing matches took place. Couch. To lie with ; to crouch ; bow low. Coulter. The sharp edge of a plough. Count, v. To reckon ; depend upon ; n., a title of nobility. Countenance. Favor ; false appearance ; hypocrisy. Count cardinal. A title applied to Wolsey {Henry VIII) as a Count Palatine. 49 Countek. To oppose ; conflict ; act in a contrary direction ; also, a term in hunting when a hound doubles in his path, missing the game. Counters. Representatives of and substitutes for coins used in games and in reckoning up accounts- Counterfeit. A portrait. Counterfully. Deceptive ; falsely. Counter-gate. The door of a debtor's prison. Originally written " compter," to indicate that the court held there took cognizance of " accompt " or " account " cases. Counterpoint. A term in music. Identical, according to Gremio, {Taming of the Shrew,) with counterpanes, bed-coverings. Countervail. To outweigh ; counterpoise. Country base. Prisoner's base or bars. County. A count. Coup le gorge. (Fr.) Cut the (his) throat ! Couplement. A couple. Course. Race ground ; arena for athletic games. " The or- der of the course " was the arrangement at the starting point, and the programme of the entertainment. Also, a sail of a ship. Court confect. A spurious nobleman. Court cupboard. A sideboard. Court of guard. The station of the main guard of an army or at the entrance of the court or square of a palace or citadel. Court hand. The manuscript of legal documents. Court holy- water. Flattery. Cousin, or coz. A friendly term, not always referring to kin- ship. At the present day the British sovereign sends, commands, or assigns duties to her "right trusty cousin" and "counsellor.'' Covent. A convent. Cover. To wear the hat. (See Bonnet.) Cowed. Awed ; frightened. Cowish. Timid. Cower-staff, or cowl-staff. A staff or pole used in carrying a basket. 50 Cowslips. The passage in Midsummer Nights Dream — " The cowslips tall her pensioners be " — has been said to mean an allusion to the costumes of the English guards in the reigns of Henry VIII and his daughters. They were then, and for a long time after- wards, called " gentlemen pensioners," now " gentlemen- at-arms." The "rubies" and "fairy favors," causing freckles, are the little red spots in the cowslip. Cox my passion. An old oath ; an euphuism for God's passion. Coxcomb, or cock's comb. (See Fool.) Cot, v. To caress; n., modest; timid- Coyed. Acted with reserve. Coysteil. A mongrel hawk ; a menial servant. Cozen. To cheat. Coziek. A clumsy workman ; a botcher. Coziek's catches. The songs of a low class of winebibbers. Cbab. A word of double signification — a shell-fish and a fruit. The latter is called a crab-apple. Crace. A small bark. Crack, n. A smart boy ; a., dissolute. Cracker. A boaster. Crack hemp. One destined to be hung. Craftily. Carefully ; secretly ; cleverly. Crank. To crook ; to wind. Cranking, or crankling. The rush of a river. Crants. Funeral garlands ; broken crockery used at funerals. Crare. A small ship. Crash. To be merry over. Craven, v. Makes cowardly ; n., coward ; a., applied to a degenerate game-cock. Create. To compound. Credent. Credible ; in good credit. Credit. Report. Crescent. Growing in that form. Crescive. Growing. Cressets. Small iron baskets stuck on posts to hold the ma- terial for torches or bonfires. Cressida's uncle. Pandorus, ( Troilus and Cressida.) Crest. The very top ; the highest, whether of a coat-of-arms, 51 the superlative beauty of a woman, or the summit of a mountain. Crestless. The having no right to armorial bearings. Ckewett. Worsted. Crisp channels ; i. e., curled — curled by the breeze. Crisp heaven. {Timon of Athens.) Probably a misprint of crypt or " vaulted." Crispin Crispinus. The saint who followed the business of a cobbler or shoemaker. Canonized for his endeavors to propagate Christianity, the 25th October was named as his day in the Christian calendar. The battle of Agin- coiirt, or Azincour, was fought on that day in 1415, and furnished some striking scenes and speeches in Henry V. Critic. Cynic. Critical. Censorious. Crocodile. Moisture oozing from the eyes of the reptile gave the idea that it wept — an emotion so opposed to its savage nature as to suggest the comparison of its tears to hypocrisy. Crone. A very old woman. Crook. To bend in the form of a hook. Crosby place, or crosby hall. The whilom dwelling of the Duke of Gloster {Richard III) is in Bishopsgate street, London. It has been ascertained that Shakespeare re- sided in the immediate neighborhood and attended at the church, nearly opposite to the " Place," in memory of which possible incident a memorial window was placed in the church in 1884. Cross, v. To confront ; interpose an obstacle. From Hora- tio's {Hamlet) declaration that he would cross the ghost, though it might blast him, the inference may be drawn that it was at one time supposed that spirits could act hostilely. n. A coin stamped with a cross ; also, a lofty erection, resembling the cross at Golgotha, often found at the roadsides in Italy, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Eus- sia, Ireland, the Northern (French) part of Canada, and other lands where the Eoman Catholic religion prevails. Sometimes all the paraphernalia of the crucifixion are attached, the more powerfully to sway the imaginations and excite the sympathies of the poor pedestrians who 52 stop on their way to kneel and offer a prayer at the foot of the cross. Gross- ways. The intersection of four roads. Until a compar- atively recent period the dead bodies of suicides were perforated with stakes and buried at those points. Crow- keeper. A scare-crow : one employed to shoot at crows. Crowned. Dignified; advanced; honored. Crownet. A coronet. ' Crowner's quest. A coroner's inquest. The blunders occa- sionally perpetrated by these inquisitors into the cause of death is covertly satirized in the verdict of felo de se pronounced in the case of Ophelia, (Hamlet.) The cir- cumstances of her death, as conjectured, or known to the Queen, point directly to an accidental drowning. She was reaching for a flower while seated on the branch of a tree ; the branch broke, and she fell into the lake. At the worst, it may have been a case of " temporary insan- ity," yet she is found to have " wilfully sought her own salvation," in the language of the Grave-digger, and her remains only obtained benefit of clergy by the high command of the King ! Cry. The music of the bark of a pack of hounds. Cry aim. To encourage. Cuckoo. Rosalind (As You Like It) speaks of the song or call of the cuckoo as unpleasing to the married man, be- cause it sounds like Cuckold, a man dishonored by his wife's infidelity. Cuckoo buds. Wild flowers of a yellow hue. Cucullus non facit monachum. (Lat.) "A hoocl does not make a monk." Cue. From the French word queue ; the tail or end of a speech, which is the signal for the next actor to speak or do. Cuisses. (Fr. cuisse — thigh.) Armor for the thighs. Cullion. A bad fellow. Culverin. A piece of ordnance embellished with representa- tions of deadly, venomous objects, especially snakes, couleuvres, (serpents,) whence probably the name of the cannoD. Cunning. Skill ; knowledge. 03 Curb and woo. Possibly " curve " was written, as it implied a bowing or bending of the person in solicitation or deference, and accords with the text better than curbing. Curiosity. Finical delicacy. Curious. Scrupulous. Curiously ; neatly ; ingeniously. Curled. Foppishly dressed. Currents. Passing events ; circumstances ; occurrences. Cursorary. Cursory. Curst. Shrewish ■ cross ; ill-tempered. Curtail. A cur. Curtailed. Shortened; diminished. Curtel. A horse whose tail has been docked. Curtle#axe. A small sword, or hatchet, hung across the thigh. Curtness. Sharp tongue. Curtsy, as applicable to the courtesies of ships towards each other' (see Merchant of Venice) when meeting at sea, has undergone some change. It was the practice for the smaller barks to lower a top-sail or dip a nag when meeting a large vessel. The usage has been su- perseded by the system of signalling, and the inter- change of civilities is expressed by each mentioning the longitude by observation on the particular day of en- counter, or communicating the latest intelligence from the port lately quitted. Cushion. A head dress, somewhat resembling a turban, pecu- liar to Henry IV and his time ; also, the seat of civil power. Custalorum. A vulgar abridgment of custos rotulorum — keeper of the records ; a justice of the peace. Custard. This pleasant compound was the material of very large pies — " quaking custards," as they were called — a common feature of grand feasts. Their enormous size justified the allusion, in AIVs Well That Ends Well, to the man who jumped into one. Custom. It is not unworthily denominated a " tyrant " and a " monster," for it often governs men in defiance of their sense of propriety. Customer. An opprobrious term for a loose woman. 5<± Cut. Call me " cut " — one of the contemptuous phrases of the Elizabethan age. " Spit in my face and call me horse" was another. It were superfluous to seek their meaning and origin. Cut and long tail. Poor and rich. The phrase was pro- verbial. The " cut " meant the short " bolt " or arrow, and " long " indicated the feathered arrow. Cutpurse. A highway robber. Cuttle. The knife of a cutpurse. Cymbeline, or Kymbeline. One of the most puzzling of Shakespeare's plays. It is replete with incongruities and anachronisms. The era of Augustus Csesar is con- founded with that of the Italy of the sixteenth century. The rude dwelling (in Wales) of the chief of an. Anglo- Saxon tribe — such as Cymbeline, would have been — is depicted as palatial, with rooms of state, a bed-room decorated with pictures, sculpture, tapestry, curtains, &c, and the young lady of the family reads herself to sleep at a time when English women had not even the rudiments of literature. She reads the tale of Tereas ! Knighthood is mentioned before any Order was dreamt of, and there are other inconsistencies and contradictions throughout. Yet the play is interesting in the develop- ment of the plot, and it abounds with poetic beauties, exceptionably Shakespearian. Cypress. Branches of the tree were used by the Romans at funeral rites. It is, therefore, spoken of as an ill-boding plant. Cyprus. At the period supposed in Othello this island was under the sovereignty of Venice. It was, however, taken by the Turks in 1370, and retained by them until, in 1870, it was ceded to Great Britain. The word " Cy- prus " signified a transparent stuff. Cytherean. Applied to Venus, because she was an object of worship in Cytherea. D Daff. To put aside ; put off. Daffodil. Shakespeare's familiarity with the floral kingdom enabled him to adapt his references to the period of the 55 year when the wild flowers severally blossom. His March flowers were the daffodil and the violet. Autoly- cus, in the Winter's Tale, sings : " When daffodils begin to peer, With heigh ! the doxy over the dale, Why, then conies in the sweet o' the year, For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale. And Perdita, in the same play, says : "Daffodils, That come before the swallow dares, and take The winds of March with beauty ; violets dim, But sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes Or Cytherea's breath." An eloquent writer observes : " This last passage is proba- bly the most perfectly felicitous piece of expression in the language, and our best example of discreet and faultless art, co-existing with the flowing opulence of an apparently spontaneous evolution. Much of the exqui- site harmony of the lines will be found to depend on the way in which alliteration, not too conspicuous, is carried from line to line, and on the fact that, perhaps with one exception, there are not in any one line two accented feet carrying the same vowel sound. The older poets were fond of the daffodil. Michael Dray- ton uses it as a simile for a shepherd's maid. Dagger. A thin sword-shaped elastic weapon of wood carried by the Yice in masques and mummeries. It is now used only by harlequins in pantomimes. The steel dagger, as a weapon of offence or defence, has been used in all countries time out of mind. Daintry. The ordinary abbreviation of Daventry, a town in Northamptonshire. Daisy. Chaucer connects the daisy with the month of May ; Shakespeare makes it an April flower. In The Rape of Luerece there is an exquisite image : " Without the bed her other fair hand was On the green coverlet ; whose perfect white Shew'd like an April daisy on the grass." And in the song which concludes the play of Love's La- bor s Lost, the white and red of the flower are alluded to : " Daisies pied and violets blue, And lady smocks all silver white." 56 Dally. To trifle. Dama.sk. A rose of mixed colors. Dancing house. A horse trained to an intelligence almost human, and exhibited in England three or four centuries ago. It was a Barbary horse called " Morocco." Dancing rapier. A sword worn in dancing. It is mentioned in Titus Andronicus, though it does not appear to have been a Roman appendage. Dangee. Control ; power ; reach. Danish sword. This refers to some very remote period of history, when England had suffered discomfiture at the hands of Denmark, and cheerfully paid tribute to the Northern Kingdom. Dank. Damp ; unwholesome. Daniel. The Jews had great reverence for Daniel, the inter- preter, prophet, and judge in Israel. When Alexander the Great visited Jerusalem, the Book of Daniel was placed before him, and his conquests and ultimate do- minion were said by the Jews to be predicted in the 2d chapter, 2-40 — a piece of flattery very agreeable to the Macedonian madman, who, therefore, spared Jerusalem. Shylock can find no complimentary term more expres- sive of his admiration of JPorticts wisdom than "a Daniel come to judgment." Danskee. A Dane. Daphne. The young person who fled from the attentions of Apollo, and was by him transformed into a laurel, the branches of which were to be typical of honor. Darlings. A slang or contemptuous word for fops. Daenel. A coarse kind of grass. Daedanian. Trojan. Dardanus, a city, according to the Iliad, situated at the foot of Mount Ida. King Dardanus was the putative ancestor of the Trojans. Dare the field. A phrase in falconry indicating that the game is afraid to rise. Daekee. Hidden. Dark house. Gloomy home. Darkling. In the dark. Darius. The rich jewelled coffin of this Assyrian prince had been taken from him by Alexander the Great and used 57 to enclose the poems of Homer, for which Alexander had great taste. Daeeaign. To act on ; array. Dabting. Skilful in the use of the javelin and arrow. The Parthians were famous, above all ancient persons, for their skill as archers. Date. Duration ; likewise an Oriental fruit. The orthogra- phy supplies Shakespeare with a pun. Daub. To disguise with paint, rags, &c; or, in the assump- tion of a character, to paint badly. Daubeby. Falsehood; counterfeit. Daw. The generic term for a large class of birds remarkable for then chattering propensities and marauding habits. The chough, the chewet, the starling, the jackdaw, the magot or magpie, all fall under this denomination, and find frequent mention in Shakespeare's works. Day-bed. A sofa. Day woman. A dairy-maid. Deae. Extreme ; excessive ; intense ; beloved ; worthy ; val- ued ; momentous. Sometimes used for dire or dread. Deae a halfpenny. Scarcely worth a half-penny. Deabest. Best ; greatest. Deabn. - Lonely.- Death's head. A memento mori in the form of a skull cut out of a precious stone and worn as the decoration of a pin's head. The practice of wearing such things is not extinct, but it is more a whimsical fancy than an article of moral significance. Death's eool. The clown in a Morality. Death tokens. Black spots on the skin indicative of the dis- ease called the plague. Debtee. Feeble. Debitoe. A debtor. "Debitor and creditor" was the title of a once popular volume which treated of pecuniary trans- actions. Debobah. The sword of Deborah {Henry IV, First Part) is a figurative allusion to the prophetess who judged Israel and encouraged Barak to attack Sisera. (See Judges, chap, iv.) Shakespeare, in this, attempts a par- allel between Deborah and La Pucelle, Joan of Arc. 58 Deboshed. Debauched. Decay. Poverty ; misfortune. Deck, v. Adorn ; picture ; bedeck ; n., a pack of cards. Decked. The sea. A north country word for " sprinkled." Decline. To fall ; also, to give all the grammatical uses of a noun substantive. Decline upon. Sinking. Deem. Thought ; j udgment ; suppositious ; surprise. Deep fet. Deep fetched. Deek. Animals. Deer's tears. Although these are called lachrymal sinus, "tear channels," they have no discovered connection with the nostrils, lungs, or heart of a deer. They are probably one of fatigued nature's outlets. Default, v. To fail ; ad,, at a need. Defeat. Utter ruin ; destruction. In war, the loss of the battle. Defeated joy. Qualified pleasure. Defeature. Disfigurement. Defence. The act of fencing ; to forbid. Deftly. Dexterously. Defy. Renounce ; reject. Degrees. Steps. Delation. Close connection. Delay. To let slip. Deliculo surgere saluberrimum est. "It is profitable to rise above effeminate pleasures." Delighted spirit. Taken in the sense of enticed away, (Lat., delectare,) the phrase may mean the spirit released, separated from the body; "to bathe in fiery floods." See Dante's "Inferno" and the Ghost of Hamlet' 1 s father's description of purgatory. Deliver. To communicate ; give utterance to purpose and thoughts. Demerits. Virtues ; merit. Demurely. Gracefully, solemnly. Den. Evening. " Good den," brief for good evening. Denay. Denial. Denmark. The King of Denmark. Denier. A farthiug ; the lowest coin ; the twelfth part of a French sou. 59 Denotement. The act of noting or marking. Denude. Strip ; divest. Denunciation. Public announcement. Also, a mistake for annunciation. Deny. Refuse. Depakt. To part. Departing. Separating life from death. Depend. To be in service or dependence. Depose. Affirm ; make a deposition in law. Deracinate. To root up. Derived. Of good origin or parentage. Derogate. Debased. Descant. To reflect upon ; a variation in music. Deserved. Deserving. Designed. Marked out. Despatched. Bereft. Desperate. Bold; determined. Despised. Wasted. Destinies. The Fates. Detected. Suspected. Determined. Put an end to ; termination. Determined time. The settled period of death. Detest. A mistake for "protest." Deucalion. An individual who lived fifteen centuries before the Christian era, and in whose time the earth is said to have been flooded. This is one of the incidents in the classical (Greek) traditions analogous to the facts re- corded in Scripture history. The great flood referred to by Cassius (Julius Ccesar) was doubtless that in which Deucalion, and not Noah, figured. Devise. Invent ; plot ; scheme. Dew. This noun is occasionally used by Shakespeare as a verb. A fairy says (Midsummer JVighfs Dream) she is employed by Titania "to dew her orbs upon the green." Diana. The goddess of the chase ; the moon ; the patroness of foresters, &c. "Diana at the fountain" (As You Like It) is a supposed allusion to a statue ornamenting a fountain, the water flowing from her bosom. Diana's priests. Vestal virgins. 60 Dian's bud. Diana was supposed to control the unruly pas- sions. The adjective " chaste " was often applied to her. Her " force and blessed power " over Cupid's sugges- tions has led botanists to call the tree Agnex castes. Dick. " May it do," or serve. Dickon. A nickname for Richard III. Dictyana. Diana ; the moon. Dido. "Widow Dido," of course the Queen of Carthage, widowed because deserted (as alleged) by iEneas. Die. A spotted ivory cube used in gambling. The fortune of a player is decided by a throw of the dice, (plural of die.) To stand the "hazard of the die" was to risk one's choice of life or fortune on the number of spots displayed in a cast of the cubes. Diet. Compelling to fast ; taking food under restriction. Dietek. A caterer ; one who cuts bulbous fruits or vegetables into shapes as decorations of a dish. Dieu de batailles. (Fr.) "God of battles." Dieu vivant. "By the living God." Diffekence. In heraldry, a distinguishing badge. Differing. Mixed in rank and opinion ; confused ; strange ; dark. Diffused. Disorderly. Digress. To transgress ; stray from the right path ; break a promise. Dig-you-good-den. Give you good evening. Dll FACIANT, LAUDIS SUMMA SIT ISTA TU^. (Lat.) "The gods grant this may be the sum total of thy glory." Dildos. The burthen of a song. Dint. Impression. Dikectitude, (vulgar.) Disgrace. Direction. Judgment ; skill. Direness. The acme of all that is terrible. Disable. To disparage ; undervalue ; dispraise ; impeach. Disappointed. Unprepared. Disastrous. In an astrological understanding it signifies dis- placement. Dis. " Dusky Dis ; " Pluto. Disbench. To cause a person to rise from a seat. Discarting. To dissolve ; removing the candies — sweets. 61 Discase. To undress. Discharge. To perform. Discontent. Malcontent. Discourse of reason. Power of argument. Discreet. Used in the sense of decent, to distinguish certain songs from the obscene. Disdained. Disdainful. Disedged. Satiated ; the edge of the appetite removed. Disgrace. Misfortune. Dishabited. Dislodged. Dislimn. To remove or efface a painting. Dislike. Displease. $ Disme. A tenth. Dismembered. Quartered ; cut to pieces. Dispark. To deprive a park of its enclosures, and therefore of its exclusiveness. Disperge. To sprinkle. Disponge. To squeeze out of a sponge. Dispose, v. To command ; incline ; ad., personal appearance. A "smooth dispose" implies a handsome face. Disposition. Frame. Dissemble. To glaze over; disguise. Dissembly. Assembly. Dissent. Displace. Distent. Instant. Distaste. Operate disagreeably. Distempered. Ruffled. Distemperature. Planetary or mental disturbance ; disorder ; out of time and season. Distraction. Small detachment. Distemper. Intemperance. Distraught. Distracted. Distressful. Full of misery. Disvouched. Contradicted. Divert. To turn aside. Divines. Ministers of the Gospel. Dives. The rich man. Division. In connection with music the word means " varia- tion. 1 ' "With ravishing division to her lute," {Henry IV.) 62 Divulged. Published. Do. (Ital.) A note in music. Do me right. Pledge me ; drink to me ! Dorr. To put off; cast aside. Dog fox. The male fox. Doit. A small coin formerly used in Holland. Dole. Portion ; share ; cause for dolor, (grief.) Dolphin. The Dauphin ; heir to the throne of France. Dolphin chamber. Rooms in inns and hotels bore names to distinguish them at a time when only a small num- ber of guests could be received, and numerals had not, therefore, necessarily come into use. Mrs. Quickly, the hostess at the Boar's Head in Eastcheap, had several apartments in her inn named, respectively, the Pome- granate, the Half Moon, the Dolphin, &c. The rooms of a certain hotel at Stratford-on-Avon are named after Shakespeare's plays. Don. To put off. Done. Expended ; cast aside ; put off. Done to death. Murdered. Done upon the gad. Suddenly. Doomsday. The day of judgment ; the day of all men's eter- nal doom — not to be confounded with Domes or Do- mus day, the day when a tax on the lands assigned to William the Conqueror by his barons and other adhe- rents was payable. The register of all these lands was called the Domesday Book, a copy of which is still ex- tant in the British Museum. Doricles. The name by which Prince Florizel ( Winter's Tale) passes at the shepherd's dwelling. Dotent, or Dotant. Dotard ; one who foolishly dotes ; an imbecile. Double. False; deceitful. Doublet. A wadded coat reaching below the waist. Double- vouchers. Duplicate documents ; a law term. Dough. This word, occurring in the proverb, "My cake is dough," expresses that a purpose is not yet accom- plished, the "dough" being simply a cake in a stage of preparation. It was a common form of expressing a disappointment. 63 Dout. Extinguish. Troves. U A dish of doves," the present which Old Gobbo takes to Launcelot for his master, {Merchant of 'Ven- ice,) was a remnant of the old custom of offering a pair of doves as a token of gratitude or propitiation of favors. The readers of Scripture will recall the incident. Dowager. A widow with a jointure or dower of which a young man had the reversion. In modern times the term is used to describe a lady who retains the title, though the husband from whom she derived it may have died and her son possess a wife who shares the position he has inherited. Thus, a dowager queen or a dowager duchess, marchioness, or countess may coexist with a queen, a duchess, &c. Dowlass. A coarse kind of cloth. Dowle. The swirl of a feather. Down gyved. Shoes down at the heel. Down roping. Flowing down. Drab. A dirty woman of a low class. Drachm. A Greek coin of small value, worth about ten pence English, or a quarter of an American dollar. It nearly corresponded with the Roman denarius, the value of which was ten asses or pounds of brass. The as or libra was a pound in weight. Dragon. Night was fabled to be drawn in a chariot by dragons. The dragons were supposed to be sleepless. Draught. A cesspool. Drave. Preterite of the verb to draw. Draw. The abbreviation of withdraw (your action at-law.) Also, tune a violin. Drawn fox. The trail of a fox drawn across a hunting ground. Dread. Dreaded; feared. Dress. Prepare. Dressings. Appearance of virtue. Dribblet. Weak. Dribbling. Ineffective ; pointless. Drive. To rush impetuously. Drollery. A comic entertainment, sometimes represented by puppets ; occasionally by living persons. Drowned. Defeated in naval warfare ; sunken ships. 64 Drugs. Drudges. Drug damn'd. Badly renowned for poisonous practices. Drumble. Slow ; sluggard. Dry. Thirsty. Ducdame, or duc adme. Lead me. Ducat. A Venetian coin of fluctuating value, averaging four or five shillings English, or an American- Spanish dollar. The name came from the Duc, Duke, or Doge, the chief ruler in Venice. Duck. To bend the head rapidly ; to nod. Due. Owing ; pertaining to, or endued with ; invested. Dug. The nipple. Dudgeon. The handle or hilt of a dagger. In old Scotland the hilts were basket-shaped and of steel, and called Dagge-a-ruellas. Duke. From Dux, (Lat.,) a leader. The title is used indiffer- ently by Shakespeare, either to indicate a successful com- mander, the ruler of a landed estate, or the possessor of an aristocratic title, which, in an English table of pre- cedence, follows the Prince of Wales. The title in Eng- land is hereditary and creative. France in the 14th and 15th centuries, and down to the period of the great revolution, contained many " kingly dukedoms," {Henry V.) They were also numerous in Germany, the dukes either exercising supreme authority, or holding their es- tate as viceroys. The greater portion of these small Ger- man dukedoms are now absorbed in the unification of the empire, while those in France have been extinguished infuturo by the establishment of a republic, but retained by the original possessors of the title. Dull, v. To stupefy ; make indifferent ; render insensible. If the palm of the hand be dulled by frequent shaking, it loses its connection with the heart, and becomes a mere instrument of form and ceremony. Dulling the palm is expressive of the effect of spending money in entertaining people. Polonius {Hamlet) gives excellent advice to his son on this subject. Dullard. A cipher ; a nobody. Dumb show. Dumb significants ; signs with the hands, aided by expressive looks. The Italians brought the art of 65 representing the story or business of a drama by signs to perfection ; the actors were called " mime," whence the words mimicry, imitation, pantomime. Dump. A heavy and melancholy tune in music. Dun. "Dun's the mouse," a hint to silence, equivalent to " Mum, don't say a word !" The word " dun " was in use in an old game called a Drawing Dun," possibly re- ferring to a horse, " We'll draw Dun out of the mire." Dup. To do up ; to raise up. Durance. A stuff of permanent value. Duties. Qualities ; natural appurtenances. E JEsop. The fabulist, who, being hump-backed, supplied a par- allel to Richard III. Eager. Acrid; sharp. Eager words. Harsh language. Eanlings. Lambs. Ear, v. To plough the land that it may produce ears of wheat. Earnest. Pecuniary gratuity ; fee. Earing, ad. The ripening of wheat, corn, and other cereals. Earth treading. A complimentary term, comparing women to heavenly objects. Earthly happier. The idea that this is merely the compara- tive adjective in the sense of "more earthly," "more comparedly," may be safely accepted. Ear kissing. Whispering. Eastcheap. A narrow street in the east of London, Fal- staff's alleged place of resort. Easy. Fickle ; easily changed ; endurable. Eat him quick. Swallow him alive. Ebbed. Gone away ; turned like the tide. Ebon. Dark. Eche. To eke out. Ecstasy. Insanity. Edict. A law. In utterance the accent occurs on the first or second syllable, according to the application of the word. As a verb, the accent is on the last syllable. Edge, v. To sharpen ; give an edge to a weapon. 66 Ediles, or iEDiLES. Roman magistrates or officers of police who had the care of cities. Edward shovel-boards. Broad shillings, coined in the reign of Edward the Third or Fourth, and used as counters of pecuniary value at the game of shovel-board. Effects. Affections. Eftest. Readiest. Eggs. Will you take eggs for money ? A proverbial expres- sion, used reproachfully when a man sees himself wronged and takes no steps to punish the aggressor. iEGLE. A nymph mentioned by Virgil. Theseus, whose amours seem to have been the sport of Oberon, (vide Titanias reproachful, jealous speech,) was not merely a hero in war. He appears to have had many amatory pas- sages of a profligate character. Ego et rex meus. "I and my king." The arrogant egotism of Cardinal Wolsey, manifested in his letter to the Pope. Egregious. Extraordinary. In some instances the modifica- tion of meaning which words have undergone amounts to a complete reversal of their original signification. An example of this is in the word 4i egregious," which, ac- cording to its etymology, would denote any species of distinction from the grex, or common herd. And such seems to have been the earliest sense in which the word was used. It would be far from complimentary now to tell a man that he spoke egregiously. How thoroughly inverted had become the sentiments that dictated the use of this word may be seen by compar- ing a passage in a poem on the battle of Blenheim by John Philips : ' ' One to empire born, Egregious prince, whose manly childhood shewed His mingled parents, and portended joy unspeakable." And Pope, in the year 1733, wrote : " How much, egregious Moore, are we Deceived by shows and forms!" And Dr. Johnson in his life of Pope : " This essay (On Man) affords an egregious instance of the predominance of genius, the dazzling splendor of imagery, and the seductive power of eloquence." 67 Travelling back in English literature, we find Milton writ- ing : "It may be denied that bishops were our first re- formers, for Wickliffe was before them, and his egregious labors are not to be neglected." And in the "Tambur- lane " of Marlowe, Shakespeare's predecessor, him of the "mighty line," we have "egregious viceroys of those eastern parts." Shakespeare himself speaks of an "egre- gious murderer," where the word simply means extra- ordinary, as it does also in the following sentence from Holinshed, whose "Chronicles of the Kings of Great Britain and Ireland" was the source whence Shakes- peare drew the materials for his historical plays : " Glut- tons and raveners, droonkards, and egregious devourers of victuals." Egypt. A gipsy. Egyptian thief. Thrames, a robber of Memphis, who slew his captive mistress to prevent her falling into other hands. Eisel. A misprint, or Shakespeare's own mistake, for Iser or Wesel. Or may he not have meant " Weser," the river in Germany contiguous to Denmark, presuming that he did not mean vinegar ? Eke. Besides. Eld. Old time ; old people. Eldee. Heart of elder. In the profusion of compliments which the Host of the Garter is paying to Dr. Caius {Merry Wives of Windsor) he may be supposed to mean the heart or pith of the elder tree. Shakespeare may have been thinking of the line in Spenser : " Great nature, ever young, yet full of elder." Eldee gun. A pop-gun of the wood of the elder tree. Elected deee. Imogen {Cymbeline) thus describes herself as the deer that has. been selected for slaughter by the . huntsman. Elements. Leading spirits. Elf, v. To elf the hair is to leave it unkempt till it hangs from the head in a matted mass. Elf-skin. Possibly Shakespeare may have written " eel-skin." In either case the word signifies slenderness. Elvish maeked. Marked by fairies. 68 Emanuel. This word was generally placed at the top of let- ters in the time of Henry YI. It was akin to the com- plimentary phrase which occurs in Oriental correspond- ence, " God bless us !" Emballing. Holding the orb or ball while being crowned. Embaee. To expose the person. Embarquements. Impediments. Embassade. An embassy. Embossed. Enclosed ; swollen ; puffy ; raised up in alto-ri- lievo ; foaming at the mouth like an exhausted deer. Embowelled. Exhausted ; also, prepared for embalmment b}- the removal of the entrails. Embraced. Encountered in combat, hand-to-hand ; also, in- dulged in. Embrasure. An embrace. Eminence. Exaltation ; the title of a cardinal. Emmew. In falconry, to restrain ; to force a hawk to lie in cover. Empericatick. Irixpirical ; charlatanism. Empery. Imperial power ; allied to royalty. Emrold. The emerald. Emulate. To rival honestly without base envy. Emulation. Envious rivalry. Enact, v. To act. Polonius {Hamlet) says he did enact Ccesar and was killed by Brutus in the Capitol. Ham- let's reply, that it was " a brute part in him to kill so capital a calf there : ' must have been intended by Shakes- peare to be a remark "aside," for the Prince was too much of a gentleman to insult Polonius by saying so to his face. The pun on " capital " would not have been made if Shakespeare had been aware that Cwsar was not killed in the Capitol, but in Pompey's theatre. Enactures. Public decrees. Encase. See Case. Encave. To enclose oneself in a cave. End. " Still an end " forever ; continually. Endart. To dart from : thrust in. Endeared. Pledged. Endymion. The handsome shepherd for whom the chaste 69 Diana thought it worth while to leave her dwelling-place in the skies and pay him a visit as he slept on the hill. " Those who called her chaste Me thinks began too soon their nomenclature." — Byron. Enfeoff. To surrender one's independence and dignity ; to give oneself up ; to invest with possession on payment or reception of a fee. Engaged. Entangled ; foils twisted together in fencing ; fight- ing. Engines. Artillery pieces ; u counterfeits of the immortal Jove's dread thunderbolt." Engineeks. The artificers and officers who manage engines. England. "A little body with a mighty heart." Fond as Shakespeare was of his native land, he nevertheless seized every opportunity of ridiculing the weaknesses of his countrymen. See the Tempest, where Trinculo discovers Caliban; see also the Grave-digger in Ham- let; Portia's description of her English suitor, Falcon- bridge, &c, in the Merchant of Venice. England's chaie. The throne. The false setting referred to in Richard III (Act V, Scene III) means the gems of paste. Pieces of glass, with colored foil beneath them, represented the usurper's crown. Englut. To swallow up ; dissipate. Engross. To follow ; add up ; multiply ; fatten. Engrossments. Accumulations. Enkindle. To stimulate. Enmesh. To enclose, as in meshes or nets. Enridged. Bordered roughly, irregularly. Ensconce. To hide oneself. Enseamed. Greasy. Ensear. To destroy, burn up, or exhaust prematurely. Enshield. To conceal ; protect ; mask. Ensign. A standard, flag, or banner. The Roman ensign consisted of a gilt eagle on a pole, with a label beneath bearing the initials S. P. Q. JR. — Salus JPopulus qua JRoma?iorum, ("the safety or protection of the Roman people.") The title of " ensign " is that of the lowest com- missioned rank in certain armies or navies. See Ancient. 70 Entertain. Encounter ; experience. Entertainment. Consideration of a proposal. Entreated. Treated. Entreatment. Interview. Envious. Malicious. Envoy. See L'envoy, or L'envoi. Envy. Enmity ; malice. Ephesian. It is vain to attempt explanations of all the words used by the Host of the Garter, {Merry Wives of Windsor.) He has but little conception himself of the meaning of half the terms he inflicts upon the guests. " Bohemian Tartar" is another of his nonsensical com- binations. Equipage. Attendance. Pistol {Merry Wives of Windsor) uses it to signify stolen goods. Ercles. Hercules. Bottom, the weaver, in the Midsummer JSTigMs Bream, is made the vehicle for the ridicule of some of the bombastic dramatic dialogue of the time. Fury and alliteration were two of its characteristics. One of Seneca's heavy plays entitled "Hercules" pos- sibly suggested the desire, put into Bottom's mouth, to play a part "to tear a cat in." Erebus. A very dark part of the infernal regions ; the tem- porary abode of those who are ultimately to be trans- ferred to Elysium — the purgatory, in fact, of heathenism. Ere. Before. Erewhile. Recently. Ergo. (Lat.) Therefore. Erring. Errant ; wandering. Error. " Melancholy's child." When men lose heart " they often fail in great attempts." Messala {Julius Cwsar) means that the doubts which oppressed Casslus led him to commit the great mistake of suicide. Escape. An illegitimate child. Escoted. Paid ; supported. Estate, v. To resign ; transfer ; bestow. Esperance ! Hope — the motto of the Percy family. Espials. Spies. Essential. Existent ; real. Estimate. Price : the value at which an article is esteemed. 71 Estimation. Surmise ; conjecture. Estridges. Ostriches. Eternal. Perennial. Eterne. Eternal. Ethiope. The black complexion of a native of Egypt or Ethiopia. Et tu, Brute! "And thou too, Brutus!" Caesar's surprise that JBrutus, whom he loved so well, should have taken part in his assassination naturally suggested the use- lessness of resistance. " Then, fall, Caesar !" But these alleged last words of eminent men have been so often proved to be the mere emanations of the minds of sur- vivors that it has come to be doubted if Coesar did really use the expression. Who heard him ? Euphuism. This affectation in language employed by Osric {Hamlet) and ridiculed by the Prince was for a time very popular at the court of Queen Elizabeth. In a preface to one of Lily's plays, " Euphues, or the Anat- omy of Wit " or " Euphues and His English," whence the term " euphuism " is derived, Blount, an editor and critic, remarks that " that beautie in Court which could not parley Euphuism was as little regarded as shee which now thei»e speaks not French." Even. To make evident.. Even christian. Fellow christian of humble rank. Even plucked. Intertwined. Ever among. At the same time. Everlasting, n. The Almighty ; also durable, in relation to wearing apparel. Evils. Jokes. Evitate. Avoid ; escape. Examined. Doubted. Excellent differences. Distinguished excellencies. Excrement. A superfluity in "growth ; an excrescence ; the beard; " valor's excrement." Execute. To use or employ. Executor. Executioner. Exempt. Deprived of ; separated ; parted ; excluded. Exequies. Funeral rites. Exercise. Homily ; religious discourse. Exeunt. See Exit. 72 Exhale. Used extravagantly by blustering jPistol, who prob- ably means " draw " your sword, or " your last breath." Exhaust. To draw forth. Exhibition. Allowance ; display ; accommodation. Exhoktation. In severe Puritanical times, when preaching and prayer entered into all the concerns of life, certain " over-righteous " persons had a practice, when called upon to say grace before meat, of inflicting grave gene- ral homilies upon the host and his guests. A grace " as lang's my arm " is referred to by Robert Burns in his apostrophe to a haggis. As this usage was consid- ered rather tedious by hungry guests at a feast, Gra- tiano {Merchant of Venice) considerately proposes to end his exhortation " after dinner." Exigent. Extremity ; pressing ; the end. Exigencies. Funeral ceremonies. Exion, (vulgar.) Action. Exit. (Lat.) To depart. In the plays it means [as a stage direction] he or she quits the stage. When more than one person goes out the plural "Exeunt" is employed. Exorcise. To raise spirits. . Expect. Expectation. Expedience. Haste ; expedition. Expedient.- Expeditious. Expend. To spend. Expense. A dear expense ; an act worthy of the expenditure of trouble. Expiate. To end. Expostulate. To expound ; discuss. Exposture. Exposure. Expressed in fancy. An allusion to the gay colors and frip- peries of costume. Expulsed. Expelled. Exsufflicate. Blown upon ; hissed off ; extravagant. Extend. To seize ; a legal form. Extent. Violence ; seizure. Extenuate. Mitigate ; relax ; palliate. Extern. Outside. Extinct, v. To extinguish. Extirp. Efface ; abolish ; root out. 73 Extract. Extracted. Extracting. Distracting. Extraug-ht. Descended; extracted. Extravagant. Erratic. Extremes. Extremities. Eyasses. Eaglets ; young hawks and kites. The name applied by Rosencrantz (Hamlet) to aspiring children who occu- pied the stage of the city to the exclusion of the adult actors. This is one of the instances in which Shakespeare availed himself of events passing at home, within his own sphere, to create incidents in his dramas. His pro- fessional brethren, and perhaps himself, were suffering at the moment from the passing popular curiosity about a corps of juvenile players, the choir of the Royal Chapel. When Hamlet speaks of the children exclaiming against "their own succession," he simply foreshadows what has often happened in the case of precocity. It seldom reaches a healthy and enduring maturity. Few actors or actresses realize the promise of their early youth. Eyas musket. A young hawk. Eye. Shade of color ; a glance. Eye of green. Shade of color. Eyliads. Soft glances. From oeillades, (Fr.) Eyne. Eyes. Eysel. Vinegar. Hamlet refers to this or the river of the name in his struggle with Laertes. F Fa. A note in music. The scale is do, re, mi, fa, sol, la. "An you re us, and fa us, you note us," (Romeo and Juliet.) It is worth remarking that originally there were seven syllables in the gamut — the initial syllables of a verse of a hymn to St. John. Do was, at a later period, substituted for ut, for the sake of the better emission of sound. Fable. When Othello says " that's a fable," he refers to the cloven foot of Satan's fancied personality. Its presence in Iago would have proved him to be the devil in the fabled form, and, therefore, unassailable by human 7 74 weapons. "If that thou be'st a devil, I cannot kill thee." Face, v. To pretend ; play the hypocrite ; to oppose ; trim ; decorate. Face-eoyal. A privileged face. Facinoeous. Wicked. Fact. Guilt. Factious. Impatient ; urgent ; insistent. Faculty. Exercise of power ; honors ; offices ; duties. Fade. Vanish. From vado, (Lat.) Fadge. To suit. Fadingo. A dance. Fail. Failure. Fain. Fond ; gladly ; willingly. Faint peimeose beds. Referring either to their perfume or their softness in accumulation. Faie. Fairly ; fairness. Faieee table. A better map ; a more promising future ; a more satisfactory record ; the lines on the palm of the hand ; the fortune-teller's chart ; palmistry. Faiby-take. There was no limit to the alleged powers and tricks of fairies. Amongst the superstitious they suffi- ciently accounted for the burglaries and larcenies in a household. The "harmless necessary cat " and the mod- ern policeman were not then the imputed aggressors. Faitoe, oe faitoue. Traitor ; a vagabond. Faith. Fidelity. Faithfully. Fervently. Faithless. Unbelieving. The Catholics seldom spoke of the Jews without the prefix " infidel " in some form or other. Fall. To drop. Falchion. A sword. Falling sickness. Epileptic fits, to which, according to Plu- tarch and Suetonius, Csesar was subject. Falsely. Illegally. False peints. Erroneous or fraudulent impressions. Falsing. Falsifying. Familiae. A demon ; an attendant evil spirit. Fancies and good-nights. Ballads ; brief poems. Fancy. Love. 75 Fancy-free. Free to give latitude to the thoughts, untram- melled by love fancies. Fancy-sick. Love-sick ; the very opposite of " fancy-free." Fane. A temple or monument. Fang. A curved and venomous tooth. F angled. Dressed up ; decorated. Fantastical. Imaginative. Fantasticoes. Affected persons. Fantasy. Imagination. Fap. An obsolete slang term for stupefied by drink. Farced. Stuffed, (from the Ital. farci.) Applicable to a form of cookery, or to the florid titles of a sovereign. Fardel. A burthen, (from the Fr. fardeau.) Fare. Food ; entertainment : form of life. " How fare youf was a mode of salutation equivalent to the modern "How do you do f Farfet. Far-fetched. Far forts. In advance. Fartherance. Assistance ; co-operation. Farthingale. A roll used in female attire for raising the gown above the hips. Far-tuous, (vulgo.) Virtuous. Fashion. Method ; form ; the popular style in dress and manners. Fashions. The farcens, (or farcy,) a disease of horses. Fast. Unalterablv ; constant. Fat. Dull. Fate. Decreed or destined fortunes. Father, v. To assume a responsibility. Fathom Capacity. Faulconbridge. The gallant bastard son of Richard Cceur de Lion {King John) must not be confounded with the typical "young English baron," who is the subject of Portia's {Merchant of Venice) ridicule, as a traveller who has seen nothing and can speak no language but his own. Shakespeare seemed to have a just contempt for the superficial tourists who returned to their native country with no higher profit than certain exotic man- ners and an eccentric costume. (See Rosalind's rebuke to " Monsieur Traveller," and the sly sarcasm levelled at Lepidus in Antony and Cleopatra.) In the third part 76 of Henry VI the name again occurs as indicating " Thomas, the natural son of William Neville, Lord Faulconbridge. " Faul. Fault. FAUSTE ! PEECOE GELID A QUANDO PECUS OMNE SUB UMBEA. " Oh, Fortune ! I pray for cold when all are under shelter." Favoe. Feature ; countenance ; general appearance ; also, the silken scarf worn over armor ; a lady's gift to a knight or warrior going forth to Palestine. Feae, v. To alarm. Feaeed, or Afeaeed. Afraid. Feaeful. Timorous ; also the opposite, " formidable." Feat, a. Dextrous ; ready ; v., to fashion ; " a glass that feated him" — i. e., gave him a model. Featee. More neatly. Featuee. Beauty. Fedeeacy. Confederate. Fedeeaey. Confederate. Fee. A lover's fee was understood to mean three kisses. Feedee. A dependant ; a servant. Feeding. Pasturage. Fee faem, or Feank feee. Unlimited duration. Fee geief. A peculiar sorrow ; a grief held in fee-simple. Feere. A companion ; a husband. Fee-simple. Land which (in English law) a man holds in per- petuity for himself and his heirs, and which exempts him from all service. Feet. Footing. Felicitate. Happy. Fell (of hair.) Flowing; the hide; also fierce, cruel, in- human ; v., to cut down. Fell feats. Savage deeds. Fen. A cave ; a marsh. Fence, v. The art of self-defence. Fennell. An herb eaten with certain fish. Fen-sucked. Marshes abounding in frogs ; the supposed abode of the fabulous dragon. Feodaey. An agent ; steward ; accomplice ; one who accepts a fee or gift for public service rendered ; also, one who holds lands or a position contingent upon his rendering service when called upon. 77 Fern seed. This seed, so small as nearly to escape the naked eye, was not only called invisible, but supposed to con- fer invisibility. Fester. To rankle ; wax virulent. Festinately. Quickly; hastily. Festival terms. Elegant phrases. Fet. Fetched ; descended from.. Fetches. Excuses ; pretexts. Fetch of warrant. A justifiable procedure. Few. " In few ;" in short ; briefly. Fico. A fig ! The word in the original Italian is used con- temptuously. Fico ! "Fig me! treat me with disdain." Fidele. Faithful ; the name assumed by Imogen, the heroic wife of Posthumus, (Cymbeline,) when she adopts male attire to go in search of her husband. Fidiused. A play on the name of Aufidius, with whom Cori- olanus had been fighting. Fielded. Experience of battle. Fifteen. A tax on the fifteenth part of a person's property. Fig. To insult. Fights. Parapets ; protection ; cover from an enemy in the field, and protection of a ship in war. Figures. Phantoms of a disordered fancy. Filch. To steal. File, v. To keep pace with; n., a list; roll; record. "The greater file " — the greater number. Filed. Abbreviation of defiled ; also, polished. Fills. Shafts of a wagon or other vehicle. Fill-horse. See Thill-Horse. Filly. The female foal of a mare. Filths. Drains ; sewers. Finch egg. A fop gaily attired. Find. To penetrate ; see through. Finder. A juror on inquests appointed to determine a per- son's sanity. Fine, n. The end ; a penalty ; ad., cunning ; finesse ; v., to embellish. Fine issues. Great consequences. Fineless. Without fine, end, or limit. Fine new. Bright as newly forged metal. 78 Finsbury. A parish in the east of London — once a fashion- able promenade. Firago. Virago ; scold. Fire drake. "Will-o'-the-wisp ; the fiery dragon of romance. Firk. To chastise. First house. The chief branch of a family. Firstlings. Earliest produce. Fit. A division of a song or poem. Fitchew. A polecat ; an offensive epithet applied to a loose woman. Fit o' the face. A grimace. Fits o' the season. Disorders of the time. Five-finger tied. Clasped by the hand. Fives. A distemper in horses. Fixture, Fixure. Position. Flag. A reed. Flamens. Roman priests of particular deities. The Flamens (or Flamines) of Jupiter were subjected to many re- strictions. Flapdragon, or Snap-dragon. Raisins steeped in brandy and set on fire, to be thus conveyed to the mouth. They are snapped out of the burning mass. Flapjack. A pancake. Flat. Positive. Flatness. Profundity. Flaunts. Disguises. Flaw. A gust of wind ; a lump of ice or congealation of any kind ; v., to break. Flayed. Stuffed. Flecked. Streaked; spotted. Fleece. The golden fleece which led Jason and the Argo- nauts to Colchos. Fleer. To cope with ; encounter ; argue. Fleet, v. Float ; flit ; change ; n., action or opinion ; an old debtors' prison in London, now extinct. Flemish. Dutch. The term " swag-bellied Hollander" ( Othel- lo) being synonymous with "Flemish drunkard," Mrs. Quickly applies the latter term to Falstaff. Flesh. To commence practice ; initiate ; experiment. To flesh a maiden sword expresses a first introduction to practical warfare. 79 Fleshed. Flushed ; satiated. Fleshment. Performance. Flewed. Deep-mouthed ; with broad, pendent chaps. Flexure. The faculty of bowing. Flibbertigibbet. A goblin ; a sprite. Flicker. To nutter. Flight. The passage of an arrow. Flirtgills. Wantons ; women of loose character. Florentius' love. Florent is a character in an old tale of Gower's — the Oonfessio Amantes. Florent's life de- pending on the solution of a riddle, he married a de- formed woman that she might solve it for him. Flote. A wave of the sea. Flourish. To ornament ; to sanction. Flout. To nutter ; insult. Flowers. See Plants and Flowers. . Flowery. Abundant ; plenteous. Flush. Ripe ; attained to manhood when the blood is on the now. Flushing. Causing redness. Fob. To impose upon ; rob. Foeman. An enemy in war. Foh ! Faugh ! or fie ! — an expression of disgust. Foil. Defeat ; placed at disadvantage. Foin. To inflict a scratch or slight puncture in fencing. Foison, or Foizon. Abundance ; rich harvest. From fusco, (Lat.,) outpouring. Folly. Depravity. Fond. Foolish ; weak. Fools. Shakespeare has introduced court fools into several of his plays, for he knew that they were of all ages and styles. But he has drawn nice distinctions in their characters. Some are mere jesters ; others, like Touch- stone, (As You Like It,) are sound philosophical reason- ers, and one is a type of affection, (King Lear.) The annals of folly hold nothing more curious than the his- tory of professional fools, who lived by their wit or their weakness. The custom of keeping court and do- mestic fools must have been very common at an early period. The Athenians had their public fools, called 80 "Flies," because they were free to enter into any ban- quet without invitation. Rome had her naturals and her monstrosities, manufactured expressly for the fool market. Haroun-al-Raschid kept a noted- jester named Bahalul, most probably an Armenian, for Armenia was held to produce the choicest strain of fools in the East. There are very early notices of fools in German courts, but not until after the Crusades did they become common among the Latin nations. Troyes would appear to have been the Armenia of the West, for there is a letter extant from Charles V of France to the mayor and burgesses asking them to supply him with another fool. Leo X kept a pack of jesters. Nor were they confined to the Old World, for Cortes saw at the court of Montezuma, in Mexico, a company of humorous misshapen beings, two of whom he procured and piously sent to Rome for the amusement of Clement VII. The pleasant folly spread ; women took to fooling, and nobles and men of learning jangled the bells and trifled with the dagger of lath. Fools amassed fortunes : estates were given to them ; witness one who held his lands upon the condition of executing "a saltus, a sufflatas, and a bambuhis''' yearly before the king. They were benefactors and founders of religious houses ; they became the confidants of kings and the mouth-pieces of political parties ; they were even sent on secret missions. In later times, Peter the Great recruited the ranks of his fools, who were divided into classes according to their qualifications, by enrolling among them those ambassadors or men of science whose negotiations or researches were not to his liking. The Franciscans borrowed their name, calling themselves "Fools of the world." The Jack Puddings, who fre- quented fairs and markets, stole their jokes. The fool's head was shaven, nor were the ladies spared this dis- figurement. Fools, being so constantly near the persons of great men, had often to stand amid the wreck of their fortunes, silent witnesses that favor, honor, and rank may be empty as the emptiest of jests. The fash- ion of humors has changed ; the old jests have lost their flavor. Muckle John, fool to Charles I, was the last 81 official royal fool in England, and in 1680 fools were reported "out of fashion.' 1 Fools carried little batons with fools' heads at the top, and they wore on their heads a decoration in form like a cock's-comb, whence the title "The King's cock-crower." Amongst the fools of Shakespeare none are so interesting as Lear's fool. He is a youth, not a grown man ; a pet- ted Jad, to whom his royal master looks for quaint say- ings and whimsical sentences when vexed or irritable ; a favored fellow, whose wayward speeches are tolerated and even liked w T hen graver cares press hard upon the old monarch, and to whose playful sallies he turns when desiring to fill a vacant half hour or beguile a leisure interval. The personal and affectionate interest taken by Lear in the lad is denoted at the very outset, and several expressions that fall from the King, when told that the fool is " pining away," exhibit his distress on the lad's account. Autolycus, the pedlar in the Winter's Tale, is not gen- erally placed among the fools and jesters of Shakespeare, but the songs he sings and the wit he utters are wit- nesses to the truth that he was intended to fill that po- sition in the play, while " the Clown " introduced is but a country booby. By his own account A utolycus was at one time in the service of Prince Florizel, and wore "three pile," that is, very rich velvet; but having dis- honored that service by some rascality he had been whipped out of the court, had passed through several grades of degradation, at last marrying a tinker's wife and turning pilferer. It is somewhat singular that the term " Fool " should have been applied to a class of jesters w T ho were remarkable for acute observation and original witticisms. Their utility at a court was shown in the freedom of speech which exhibited the vices and exposed the rogueries of treasonous parasites. They jested with impunity, not even sparing the sovereign they served if he per- petrated any special folly. Practically, the professional fool was a serviceable satirist in an age when there was no press. He spoke what the modern Punch and Charivari print. 82 Fool-begged. Petitions to the Crown on behalf of idiots, who were so called. Foot, n. An inferior. " My foot my tutor !" exclaims Pros- pero, apparently indignant that any one beneath him should presume to teach him his office ; v., to seize by the claws, as eagles, hawks, &c, pounce on their prey and tear it in pieces. Foot- cloth. Covering for a horse. Foe. Because. Forage, v. To plunder; revel. "Forage in blood" explains the violence used by soldiers in procuring food for them- selves and their horses. Forbid. Accursed. "A man forbid" implied that he was suffering under a Papal ban — i. e., denied benefit of clergy by a decree of the Pope of Rome. Force. To stuff; enclose; n., minced (or forced) meat in a vegetable or pastry. Forced. False ; of force ; perforce. Fordid. Destroyed. Fordo. To ruin ; undo. Fordone. Overcome ; vanquished. Foreign. Obliged to live abroad. Forend. Previous part. Forfend. To forbid. Forehard. Shaft : a powerful arrow used in point-blank . shooting. Forepast. Already possessed. Foreslow. To loiter ; to be dilatory. Forespent. Exhausted. Forestalled. Anticipated; eclipsed; prevented. Forfeit. Transgression. Forfeited. An offender against the laws ; one who breaks a bond and thereby incurs a penalty or forfeit. Forfeits. Penalties enforced by barbers in their shops if certain ridiculous rules were broken. Forfend. Prohibit. Forge, v. To suggest fears ; anticipate danger. FoRGETrvE. Inventive ; capable of forging ; mentally. Forked. Horned; cuckolded. Forks. The fingers. 83 Formal. Proper form. Former. Foremost. Forspent. Exhausted ; weary. Forspoke. Contradicted. Forth. Through ; right through. " Hear this matter forth." Fortinbras. The name of this Norwegian, who fulfils an un- important place in the imaginary epoch of Hamlet, has long since been incorporated among English proper names as Strong V tK arm. It was, perhaps, adopted during the Commonwealth, or later, when the revoca- tion of the Edict of Nantes compelled many French families to resort to England and adopt translations of their names, as Brown (Le Brun,) White (Le Blanc,) Black (Le Noir,) &o. Forthrights. Public paths. Forty. A word often used by Shakespeare to express an in- definite number. Forty pence expressed a wager. Fortuna della guerra. (Ital.) Fortune of war. FORWEARIED. Worn Out. Fossett, or Faucet. A tap and spigot comprehended. Fossett-seller. One who disposes of the foregoing articles. Found. Experienced. Foutre. (Fr.) A disgusting, untranslatable epithet. Fox. A sword. A drawn fox is a dead fox drawn over hunt- ing ground to give the scent to the dogs. Foxship. A cunning man. Fract. To break ; commercially, to fail in the date of a con- tract. Frampold. Cross ; negligent. Frank. The feeding place of a hog ; a sty. Franked. Confined in a sty. Franklin. A small freeholder. Fraught. Freighted. Frautage. Freight. Fray. A fight ; sometimes written "affray." Frayed. Alarmed. Free. Artless ; open. Free-gait. Military step. Freeness. Clemency ; giving freedom to bondsmen. 84 Fresh. A spring of fresh water. Fret. The stop or string of a harp or lute. Fretted. Dotted ; decorated ; embossed. Friend, n. A lover ; ad., friendship ; v., to befriend. Frippery. A rag store ; a shop for second-hand clothes. Frize. A coarse Welch cloth. Froissart. A French chronicler. Much of the early history of England is derived from the " Chronicles " of this writer. He seems to have judged the character of the people correctly. Frolic. Fun ; gaiety. From. In opposition to. Front. The forehead. Fronted. Opposed. Frontier. A frowning aspect. "The moody frontier of a servant brow " — an index of rebellion. Frontlet. A cloth for the forehead. Froth and lime. This was an instruction to Bardolph {Henry IV) to qualify the ale or sack for Falstaff. The froth- ing was produced by greasing the bottom of a tankard. For the explanation of the '"lime," see Sack. Fruit. The practice of eating fruit as a dessert, or sequel to a dinner, explains the comparison suggested by Polo- nius {Hamlet) for his appearance after a great feast. Frush. To crush ; break to pieces. Fub off. Postpone ; put aside on frivolous grounds. Fulfil. To fill full. Fulham. False dice. Full. Complete. "A full soldier." Full-fraught. Perfect in the possession of good qualities. Fulsome. Obscene. Fumiter. Smoking manure. Function. Office ; place ; or a bodily organ. Furnished. Equipped. "Furnished forth." Furnishings. Pretences ; colorings. Furnitor. An herb. Fust. To decay ; grow mouldy. Fustilarion. Probably a nickname for a sheriff's officer, who carried a staff or fastis. 85 a Gaberdine. A long cloak worn by the Jews in other times, and even by many at the present day. The gaber, or garber, is the cloak that gives the name to the entire article. The blue-cloaked beggars in Scotland were called Gaberlunzies, from their costume. It may be that the name came from the East, as the kabba or gabba is worn by the people in Mesopotamia. Gabriel. The first or christian name of an actor who played the small part of a messenger in the Third Part of Henry VI Gad, ad. The moment ; suddenly ; also, n., a sharp-pointed instrument. Gadfly. A troublesome insect with brilliant wings. Gadshill. A rising ground in Kent, overlooking the river Medway and the town of Rochester. The place where Charles Dickens lived and died. Gaoe. A pledge. Gain. Giving ; misgiving. Gainsay. To unsay ; deny. Gait. Pace ; step ; carriage. Equally applicable to the mo- tions of the human body or the progress of a transac- tion. Galen and Paracelsus. Physicians of some celebrity A. D. 200. Galias. (From the Italian galliazza.) A heavy, three-masted vessel. Gall. To irritate. Galled-jade. The horse or mule chafed on the withers by the collar or other piece of harness. Gallia. Gaul, the ancient name of France. Galliard. A French dance. Gallian. The territory of Gaul. Gallimaufry, or Gallimaufrie. A medley dish of various meats. Gallow. To frighten. Gallowglasses. Stanislaus, who lived in 1570, describes these people as heavily-armed infantry — " men grim of countenance, tall of stature, big of limb, burly of body, 86 well and strongly timbered, and chiefly fed on beef, pork, and butter. The meat they eat half raw. and then com- plete the cooking of it in their own stomachs, where it is boiled with whiskey, (usquebaugh.)" They were Scotch-Irish — i. e., natives of the north of Ireland. Galloway-nags. Small horses bred in Galloway, a district of Scotland. Gamut. The scale of notes in music — do, (or ut,) re, mi, fa, sol, la. Gangrene. A mortification of the flesh. • Gamester. A lively person ; a wanton. * Gap and trade. The high road to preferment. Gaping. Shouting ; open-mouthed. See Pig. Garagantua. A gigantic personage who figures in the witty work of Rabelais — so called by his father because his first words were " drink, drink." Hearing them, the father said: " Que grand tu as et souple le gosier" — " How large you are, and pliant is your throat !" Garb. The " rank garb ;" a condition of sensuality. Garboils. Disturbances ; commotions. Garish. Gaudy ; exposed. Garnered. Treasured up. Garter. When very long hose formed part of a man's equip- ment the garter was an indispensable adjunct. The " Order of the Garter " is an English distinction, dating from the reign of Edward III, and conferred on noble- men of high rank for important services rendered the Crown or the country. See Honi soit qui mal y pense. Falstaff refers to the Order when he tells Prince Henry to "hang himself in his own hen apparent garters." Gasted. Frightened. The word is obsolete, but perhaps it is the parent of the slang word " flabbergasted." Gaunt. Meagre. The word is a corruption of Ghent, in Bel- gium. John of Gaunt — " time-honored Lancaster " — was descended from a Flemish family of Ghent, where he also was born. Gawds, Gawdy, Gawdry. Pertaining to vulgar finery and frippery as distinct from solid ornament. The French people were held to be most select and gracious in their apparel — "rich, not gaudy" — that proclaimed the man, 87 {Hamlet.) Clinquant, decorated, bagatelles, knick- knacks — all pertain to the gawdy family. Gaze. Attention. Gear. Business in hand ; things or matters. Geck. A fool. Geer. Troublesome affair. Gelded. Emasculated. Gelidus timor occupat artus. (Lat.) Cold fear seizes his limbs. General. The masses ; the public at large ; the lower classes. General gender. The mass of men. Generations. Children. Generosity. High quality ; nobility. Generous. Noble ; free ; lavish ; munificent. Genius. Inventive power. " The genius and the mortal in- struments are then in council." This passage in Julius Ccesar, which seems to have puzzled certain commenta- tors, was probably intended to convey the idea that the inventive faculty and the means to give it operation were at once and together the subject of the thoughts of the conspirators. Gennets. Small Spanish horses. Gentile. This term, originally signifying all sorts of heath- ens and unbelievers, gradually came to be applied by the Jews to the Christians, for, of course, the latter were as sceptical of the doctrines of the Israelites as the Jews had been. Gentility. Politeness ; urbanity ; refinement. Gentle, v. To ennoble ; ad., noble ; well born and bred. Gentleness. " True gentleness ;" the spirit of a gentleman. No one better understood or more highly valued the character of a true gentleman than William Shakespeare. He felt that it pertained to all ranks in life. It is the attribute alike of the prince and. the peasant ; and Shakes- peare mentions the word fifty times in connection with all that is great and good in man. A modern writer (W. M. Thackeray) seems to have embodied the ideas of the mighty dramatist in one or two striking paragraphs of a popular lecture. He says: "Wherever the English language is spoken there is no man that does not feel 88 and understand and use the noble English word ' gen- tleman.' " " Gentle in our bearing through life ; gentle and courteous to our neighbor — gentle in dealing with his follies and weaknesses ; gentle in treating his oppo- sites ; deferential to the old ; kindly to the poor and those below us in degree" — this it is to be a gentle- man, whether in the political circles of Europe, in Cali- fornia, New York, the backwoods, or the mining districts of America. That Shakespeare should manifest more interest in the aristocracy than in the lower classes is not simply the result of his own perception of the dif- ference in men wrought by education. He was much in the society of true gentlemen. The Earls of South- ampton and Surry were frequently with him. He must have been in communication with "Lord Bacon, and pos- sibly he may have seen Sir Philip Sidney, though Sidney died in the year 1587, when Shakespeare first went to London. Gentry. Complaisance. George. The title of an English knight who wears the " Gar- ter." German, or Geemane. Akin to ; suited to. Germany. ; ' Our neighbors, the Upper Germany," refers to some Lutheran disturbances in Saxony. Germen, Germins. Seeds beginning to sprout. Gest. (From giste, Fr.) A lodging-house or place — originally the halting stages of kings on a " progress ;" exploit in action. Get. To go ; to betake oneself. Ghastness. Having a ghastly, hideous appearance. Ghost. The Bible reading of this word is not precisely that which Shakespeare adopts. With him, a ghost is not simply the spirit of an individual utterly divorced from the body, but the representation of a deceased person returning to earth "in his habit as he lived," and actu- ally holding communication with living men. This was, in all probability, a concession to the credulous spirit of a half-civilized society rather than the result of Shakes- peare's own convictions, and perhaps its utility in the production of stage effect may have induced its adop- 89 tion ; hence the talking ghosts in Hamlet, Julius Ccesar, Richard III, Henry VI, &c. Gib. A worn-out, emasculated cat. Giddy. Inconstant ; unreliable. Giglet. A giddy girl ; a wanton. Gilder, or Guilder. A coin of the value of Is. 6d., English. Gifts. Talents ; natural endowments. Gilt. Money. Gimmel. (From the Latin gemellus — twin-doubled.) A ma- chine for producing motion ; a motor. In the instance in which Shakespeare uses it an interlocked instrument is meant, such as clock-work, the snaffle of a horse, &c; or it is possible that Shakespeare was thinking of gimmal rings, some of which had engraven on them a hand with a heart in it, when (in the Tempest) he makes Ferdinand say to Miranda, " Here's my hand," and she answers, "And mine, with my heart in it." A beautiful enamelled ring of this kind is extant. It opens horizontally, thus forming two rings, which are, nevertheless, linked to- gether and respectively inscribed on the inner side with a Scripture posy ; " quod. devs. conjvnxit," (" What God did join,''' 1 ) is engraved on one half, and " homo non sepa- rat," {"let not man separate") on the other. The ring is beautifully enamelled. Gimmel bit. A double bit. Gimmer. Contrivance. Ging^ An old word for " gang." Gingerly. Delicately. Gird. To jeer, scoff, dare, encounter; a gentle rebuke. Girdle. A belt to which the sword was attached, when worn. When it was said that " an angry man knows how to turn his girdle," the inference was that he had to get at his sword, draw, and use it. The buckle of the girdle of wrestlers w r as also turned back when they were going to operate. Its reversal gave them a better grip of the adversary's girdle. Glaive. A sword. Glass-gazing. Fond of consulting a mirror. Glassy essence. Fragile being or existence. 90 Gleek. To joke; crack jokes. Glooming. Gloomy. Gloze. To expound ; polish ; lie ; flatter. Glut. To swallow. Gnael. To snarl ; to gnaw. God ! It is worthy of note that the use of the name of the Most High having been forbidden by an Act of Parliament in the reign of James I, some of the editions of Shakespeare substitute the word " heaven/' a distinction almost with- out a difference, unless we are to understand that " God " means the Almighty Power himself, and heaven merely the supposed place of His abode, which in itself is pow- erless. It is more in accordance with our convictions that God is omnipotent, everywhere and at all times, that we should accept the first idea, and the profanity of the use of His holy name depends on the circum- stances in which it is employed. Taking the name " in vain " implies the violation of an oath. God befoke ! God be my guide ! Godded. Deified. God 'ild you ! God shield you ! Godfathers. Sponsors at the baptism of a Protestant chris- tian child. When Gratiano {Merchant of Venice) pro- poses to add ten to the two sponsors for Shylock, at his anticipated baptism, he alludes to a jury of twelve who would infallibly have condemned the Jew to death. But this is a palpable anachronism, for trial by jury was not a Venetian institution. God's boddikins. An ejaculation referring to the Saviour's person. Gondola. A covered boat used on the canals of Venice. To have " swam in a gondola " was a proof of foreign travel in the sixteenth century. Gondolier. The oarsman of a gondola. Gongarian. Pistol confounds the word with Hungarian, {Henry IV, Second Part.) Good. Commercially responsible ; good security. Good deed ! Indeed ! Good den. Good evening. Good jer ! " Good yer !" Tantamount to " What, the deuce !" 91 Good-nights. Last dying speeches. Good time. "In good time ;" apropos ; opportunity offering; maturity. Goose. A " Winchester goose " was an offensive appellation, indicating that the individual was the subject of a dis- gusting disease. Goebellied. Swollen by luxury. Goe'd. Soiled; tarnished. "My fame is shrewdly gored," (Troilus and Cressida.) Gorge. The throat. The rising in the gorge is a symptom of anger, indignation, (morally,) or (physically) a dispo- sition to vomit. Goese. A species of furze. Gospellees. Puritanically religious. Gossamee. Atoms that float in the sunbeams. Gossips. Midwives ; talkative women. Got. God. " Got wot," God knows. The mispronunciation of the sacred word is a Welsh characteristic. Go to. An obsolete phrase in the sense of "very well!" Goujeee. A scooper out. To gouge is literally " to tear out the eyes." Some commentators call the word " a name- less disease," because it is so in the French language, but the context in King Lear denotes its true applica- tion — Gloster's eyes have just been torn out by the bru- tal order of Cornwall. Goueds. Dice. Goued and Fulham. Obsolete cant words for false (loaded) dice. Gouts. Drops. Goveenment. Discretion ; good management. Go youe gait ! Go away ! vanish ! Geace. See Exhoetation ; also, Good Fobtttne. Geacious. Grace and beauty combined. Geace to boot ! An exclamation equivalent to " Give us grace !" Geained. Furrowed ; also, dyed ingrain. Geained ash. The staff or pole of a lance. Gbange. A lone farm-house ; a barn or granary. Geameecy. Grand merci, "many thanks." It was originally used in a pious sense, as Grace a Dieu ! " Thank God !" Geass. "While the grass grows the steed starves " is the proverb which Hamlet calls "musty." 92 Grapple. To grasp ; grip ; as an anchor clings to the bottom *^of the sea. Gratify, v. Recompense ; fee ; reward. Gratillity. A euphuism for gratuity. " I will impetticose your gratillity " — i. e., I will pocket your gift. Grates. Offends. Grats. Pleasure. Gratulate. To congratulate. Grave. To entomb. Grave man. A man in his grave. Graymalkin. A name given to cats, with which witches were supposed to sort. Greasily. Grossly. Great morning. The dawn ; daybreak. Greaves. The armor of the legs. Greek, with the prefix "foolish," (Timon of Athens,) was said to be synonymous with pander or pimp. A " merry Greek " was a term for a jester. Green. Young ; inexperienced. Green-eyed. This is rather a singular epithet to apply to jealousy, for it is not the fact that cats, the only well- known " green-eyed " animals, are more jealous than other animals ; nor is there any known " monster " that makes the meat it feeds on. A jealous disposition no doubt creates the misery of its owner by converting " trifles light as air " into " confirmation strong as proofs of Holy Writ," but the metaphorical allusion is not happy. " Mocks the meat " better expresses the inten- tion. Green sleeves. The title of an old once popular song. Greet. To weep. Greyhound's mouth. The greyhound can pick up its game while running at full speed, a feat no other dog can ac- complish. Griefs. Grievances. Griffin. A fabulous animal, which often figures as a crest or one of the supporters of a coat-of-arms in aristocratic societies. In form it is represented with the body of a horse, the tail of a lion, the claws and wings of an eagle, and a head which combines the features of the horse 93 and the eagle. May not this be derived from the Assy- rian figures, emblematic of physical power, wisdom, and ubiquity, which have been found in the buried ruins of Nineveh ? Gkise, Geize. Step. From Fr. gre. Grissell. An abbreviation of Griselda, the heroine of one of Chaucer's tales, and also of one of the tales in Boccacio's Decameron. The English poet no doubt borrowed from the Italian. Groat. Fourpence English. When Coriolanus speaks of an inferior class of people who bought and sold with " groats " he means either that they were retail dealers who sold their goods for small coin or trafficked in oats and grain beaten out of the husks. Groom. Not merely a stable-keeper, but a mean, low fellow of any or no occupation. Singularly enough, the term is employed to indicate a Court position or function, and, as an affix, it denotes the henchman or squire, for the moment, of a man about to be married. Gross. Palpable ; coarse ; exaggerated ; the sum total. Grossness. Simplicity. Groundlings. The people who occupied in a theatre the bare space between the stage and the circular seats, and now called the pit, parquet, or parterre. Guard. To fringe. Guardage. Custody ; protection. Guarded. Ornamented with lace. Gudgeon. A small fish found in English and French rivers, easily caught, and used by anglers as bait for larger fish. Guerdon. A reward. Gulled. Treacherous. Guinea-hen. The speckled peafowl, originally from the coast of Guinea, Africa ; an offensive appellation of a woman. Guisnes and Ard. Two towns in Picardy. Gules. Red ; a term in heraldry. Gulf. The throat. Gull. The young cuckoo ; an unfledged bird ; figuratively, a fool ; easily deceived. Gummed velvet. In rubbing dried gum off velvet a ruffling noise is produced like the twanging of a tightened harp 94 or guitar string. In music, the twang was called fret- ting. "I'll fret you." (See Taming of the Shrew.) Gun stone. A cannon ball. Gurnet. A coarse sea fish. "When stale it is soused in vine- gar — i. 6., pickled, to render it still edible. Gust. (From gusto, Ital.) Taste. Guts. The entrails ; the bowels. It is now considered a gross term. Gyve, v. To shackle; n., gyves; shackles. "Down gyved," as applied to loose hose reaching to the ankle, is a not inapt comparison as to appearances. Disconsolate lov- ers were accustomed to forget their garters. Hac. (Latin ablative of hcec, a demonstrative pronoun. It has three terms, varied by circumstances, as hie, hcec, hoc.) The Latin verse with which Lucentio (I'aming of the Shrevj) beguiles Hortensio runs thus : ' ' Hac ibat Simois ; hie est Sigeia tellus ; Hie steterat Priarni regia celsa senis." Rhymer has thus musically rendered the passage : " This Simois — that the Sigsean land, And there did Priam's lofty palace stand." Hack. To notch ; make common; hence, "hacknied." Hackney. Common ; stale. Haggard, ad Pale ; wan ; wild. In falconry, a hawk that is untrue to its training. Hail! A salutation — "all hail!" from the Saxon "hael" — a good health ! Hair. Quality ; complexion. Wigs and false ringlets must have been as much in fashion in Shakespeare's day, and long previously, as they are at the present time. JBas- sanio refers to the crisp, snaky, golden locks that came from skulls then "in the sepulchre." Hair taken from the living and the dead in South America and Mexico, still forms a large article of commercial import into Europe, where, by the coiffeurs', dyers', and perfumers' " cunning " it is changed into a variety of hues, and worn by women to whom nature has assigned but a small 95 quantity of hirsute decoration. Hair was also synony- mous with complexion, (metaphorically. ) In Henry IV occurs the expression, " the quality and hair of our at- tempt." "To be merry 'against the hair' was the equiv- alent of "against the grain." Halcyon. Calm ; like the kingfisher's period of incubation on the water. Hale. To drag away forcibly. Half caps. A cold courtesy. Half cheek. A profile. Half-faced. In profile ; insincere ; imperfect. Half-faced sun. The device of Edward III of England was a representation of the sun bursting through the clouds ; possibly a reference to the light suddenly cast on truth and Christianity by Wickliffe in that reign. Half kietles. Short cloaks. Halidom. An oath or adjuration, derived from an Anglo-Saxon expression equivalent to " By my sacrament !" Hall ! Make room ! Hallidon. Man's doom at the day of judgment. Hallowed. Made sacred. Trinkets touched by the reliques of a saint acquired a value when the Catholic priesthood governed the minds of the people. Hallowmas. All Saints' Day. At Hallow fair, near Edin- burgh, (Scotland.) and other places, a vast crowd usually assembled, and beggars found a fitting opportunity of procuring alms. Hamlet. Two plays with this title are still extant: one of them is spurious, though assigned to Shakespeare, the other genuine, and clearly the result of his own genius in working up old material. The following explanation is supplied by Mr. Richard Grant White, a distinguished American scholar and philologist : This is the story of the two Hamlets. Shakespeare, in 1599-1600, wrote his great tragedy, founding it upon the plot of an old play known as " The Kevenge of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark," which itself was founded on an old story told by Saxo Grammaticus. Shakespeare's play, produced in 1600, made such an impression upon gentle and simple, upon the highly-educated classes as well as upon the public in general, that it was acted not only in Lon- don, but at Oxford and Cambridge, and elsewhere. There was 96 an eager desire to read it ; but, according to the custom of the day, the text was jealously guarded by its theatrical proprietors. Under these circumstances, a piratical printer named James Rob- erts set himself to get for publication a copy of this wonderful play, which all the world was going to and talking of ; and natu- rally applying to the minor actors in Shakespeare's company, he succeeded in corrupting the man who played Voltimand, and in- duced him to undertake to get a copy. He, however, was able to get only fragments, great and small. Some parts of the play he gave from memory ; some he got by surreptitious examination of the stage copy and of actors' parts ; and all this being still not enough, James Roberts had some of the play taken down in shorthand during the performance, which was very lamely done. Some passages were taken from the old play, which had the same plot. This mass of heterogeneous stuff, some of it just what the author wrote, but the greater part of it what no dramatist ever wrote, was pieced and patched together, and hurriedly published, to the horror of William Shakespeare, and so much to the injury of the tragedy, as it was thought, that a " true and perfect copy," containing much that never at any time was heard on Shake- speare's stage, was immediately sent to the publisher, who soon issued it cured, and perfect of its limbs and absolute in its mem- bers, as it had been conceived by its great creator. The copy of the play now extant and cordially accepted as Shakespeare's is replete with evidences of his rare genius. The plot, the characters, and the dialogue are unmistakably the offspring of a dramatic power to which no one else of his or any other time could possibly lay claim. Much of the poetry, however, has been traced to other sources. Even the admired soliloquy on sui- cide beginning "To be or not to be " has an antique origin. Mr. Langhorn, in his translation of Plutarch's "Lives," shows that the speech in question was trans- lated almost verbatim from Plato. It is probably the reasoning of the old Greek philosopher in that disser- tation on self-murder which led Addison to put into the mouth of Cato (in the tragedy of that title) the speech beginning with the observation, " It must be so ; Plato, thou reasonest well," &c. Cato has been reading Plato; doubtless the soliloquy on self-murder. Hampton. Southampton, in Hampshire. Handed. Free or mischievous with the hand. Handsaw. See Hawk. Hangers. The supports of a sword. 97 Hannibal. A vulgar blunder for "cannibal." Hap. Chance ; fortune. Happily. Fortunately. Haply. Surely ; possibly ; perhaps. The word is modestly and diffidently used, and sometimes in the sense of " happily." Happy. Accomplished. Hammes Castle, in Picardy. Haebingee. A herald ; a sort of prognostic of events. Haed. Difficult. "I did full hard forbear him" — I could scarcely restrain my inclination to punish him. Haediment. Boldness ; bravery ; blows. Haelocks. Wild mustard. Haelot. A person of vagabond habits. Haelotey. Coarse ; vulgar ; immoral. Harp, v. To dwell upon; iterate; n., a "miraculous" instru- ment in the hands of Arion, which attracted the dolphins around his ship. Haepee. One of the familiar spirits of the weird "sisters three," at whose bidding those mysterious hags had to move. Paddock, the toad, and Graymalkin, the cat, had the same influence over them. Haepy. A fabulous, malignant object, supposed to be en- dowed with wings, claws, and offensive powers gener- ally. Haeeows. Subdues. Haeey. To worry. Haet. The buck or male deer. Hatch. " Take the hatch," {King John,) equivalent to remove a hedge or obstruction by, in sporting phrase, "taking 11 it or leaping it. Hatched in silvee. An evident mistake for " thatched," in reference to the silver hairs which covered Nestor's head. Hatchment. A corruption of "achievement;" an armorial es- cutcheon representing the heraldic coat-of-arms of a deceased nobleman or other person of "quality." It is often placed on the facade of a house in England which has been recently vacated by the death of the noble occupant. 98 Haud credo. (Lat.) I do not believe. Haught. Haughty ; high, lofty in deportment and senti- ment. Haughty. High spirited. Haunt. A place of resort. Haunted. Disturbed by fancies. Have with you ! Come along ! Haver. Possessor. Ha ing. Property ; possessions. Havior. Behavior ; bearing. Havoc. An old Saxon war-cry, (Hafoc !) intimating that no quarter will be given or accepted in battle. Hawk. A bricklayer's hod for carrying bricks and mortar ; also, a bird of prey (a falcon) trained to hunt feathered game. Hawk. The passage in Hamlet, "when the wind is southerly I know a hawk from a handsaw/' (or hernshaw,) has been a source of serious trouble to innumerable stu- dents and annotators, because the hieroglyphical char- acter of Shakespeare's caligraphy has left it doubtful whether he wrote "handsaw" or "hernshaw." It is most likely that the latter word, meaning a young heron, was the one he used, judging from the context. In hawking, i. e., hunting the heron with the trained fal- con, the falconer would sometimes be dependent on the state of the atmosphere to distinguish between the hawk and its prey. In flying after the quarry the hawk would, of course, try to rise above the young heron or hern- shaw, (Walter Scott writes hernshew,) and the latter would naturally seek to prevent its being pounced upon were the antagonist uppermost. The circling manoeu- vres of the two birds when at a great distance from the earth, if the air were thick, made it a trouble to tell the "hawk. from the hernshaw," and hence the import- ance of a southerly wind. Hamlet would not have required any particular condition of the atmosphere to distinguish between two of a builder's tools. Besides, if " I know a hawk from a handsaw " were a common saying, it would be found in some of the works of Shake- speare's contemporaries, but it is not traceable in any of their dialogues. 99 ' Foreigners who have attempted to translate Shakespeare invariably selected the bird (epervier) as the object of the proverb in preference to the conjectured implement. Hay. A term in fencing. Hazard. A part of a tennis-court into which a ball is cast. Head. A force ; a body of soldiers. "We'll save our heads by raising of a head." Head-lug, w.- To pull the hair. Heady. Violent ; fierce. Health, in its moral application, means that which is sound, of good purpose. We speak of the healthy tone of a book — a wholesome tone that recommends the work to our better sense. In Hamlet the " spirit of health " is antagonized with "the goblin damned" — the principle of good contrasted with the symbol of evil. Heat, v. To excite ; n., rage ; pursuit ; race. Heaven, Heavens. Employed in some cases as a substitute for " God Almighty ;" in others to represent the skies, the atmosphere. Hearts ! A familiar apostrophe in the mouths of rustics and other common people in Shakespeare's time. Hebenon. Henbane, a deadly poison. Hecate. The chief of the malevolent witches, represented in antique statues as a triple figure, bearing in her hands a snake, a dagger, a torch, and the key of Avernus. In As You Like It she is spoken of as the " thrice-crowned queen of Dight." Hedge. To proceed covertly ; to creep by the hedge instead of marching in the open road. Heed. Obstinate ; rash. Heels. To "layby the heels," or "punish of the heels," was a figurative and vulgar form of expressing a depriva- tion of the liberty of locomotion ; in other words, it meant sending a man to prison. Hefted. Heaved ; agitated ; delicately formed. Hefts. Things that have been thrown up by the agitation of the sea. Heir. Heirs and heiresses to estates were at one time at the disposal of the King. Gloster {Henry ~V") reproaches Edward for having given the daughter of Lord Scales to the brother of Lady Gray. 100 Helen's beauty — i. e., the beauty of Helen of Troy — is here contrasted with that of Cleopatra. The olive " brow of Egypt " was antagonized by the reputed fairness of the woman who enslaved Paris. (See Homer's Iliad.) It is a proof of the effect of love in disordering the fancy that one can see equal beauty in either form. Shake- speare has made little use of Helen as one of his dramatis personce. She only appears in one or two scenes in Troilus and Cressida. Helicons. A corruption of Heleconiades — the nine Muses. Hell. A dungeon. "Hollow hell," an old notion that the infernal regions were a vast hollow in the centre of the earth. Helm, v. To take the direction of any business. Helmed. Steered through. Hempen homespuns. This explains that the artisans were all weavers of hemp. Hence. Henceforward ; thereafter. Henchman. The squire, page, or other follower of a knight. Lord Byron (Don Juan) puts the word into the mouth of a robber addressing his comrade. Henky V. Few plays more emphatically display the strength and audacity of the English character than this noble drama. Its outline was borrowed from a poor thing of the time, called " The famous victories of Henry V." Henky VI. Of the three parts of this play, two at least were partially written by Greene, one of Shakespeare's con- temporaries. There was great difference in their re- spective styles, Greene wanting the virtue of simplicity and constantly making pedantic classical references with- out either taste or discretion. Shakespeare supplied all that was necessary to impart vigor and naturalness to the characters and true poetry to the dialogue. Parts of Henry VIII were in like manner contributed by Fletcher, the partner in dramatic authorship of Beau- mont. Hent. Seized ; take ; leap over. Heealdky. The science of blazonry — the decoration of lofty genealogy and knightly rank, comprised in a coat-of- arms, representing a shield, surmounted hj a crista or 101 crest, with figures as supporters, and, beneath, a scroll, bearing a motto descriptive of the family sentiment. Ich dien, " I serve," was the modest motto adopted by the Black Prince (son of Edward III) when he had scored his knighthood on the field of battle. Hekcules. The name used in connection " with his load " re- fers to Atlas, who bore the whole world on his shoulders. Hekculean Roman. A reference to Mark Antony's boast that he was descended from Hercules. Herb of grace. Roe Heresy. Opposition to and disbelief in a certain accepted form of religion. Roman Catholics denounced Protestants as " heretics," and Moslems have the same detestation of Christians. It is, in fact, odium, theologicum under sev- eral aspects. Hermes. Mercury, the messenger. Hermits. Beadsmen who lived in seclusion. Herne the hunter.* There was an oak in Windsor forest or park called " Heme's," because it was once peculiarly guarded by him as gate-keeper, and a superstition existed that after his death his spirit haunted the vicinity of the oak, and punished transgressors on the sacred spot. Herod. An extravagant hero of an old play. To " out-Herod Herod " was to exceed the character in rant and violence. Hereby. "That's hereby" — that depends on circumstances. Herring. See Shot ten Herring. Hesperus. The evening star. Hest. Behest ; command. Hey-day. The prime. Hibocrates. A Welsh mispronunciation of Hippocrates. Hie. See Hac Hie jacet. "Here lieth" — a frequent commencement of an inscription on a tombstone. Hide-fox. A children's game. High-day. A holiday, though not always a "holy" or saint's day. High-engendered. Begotten of Heaven ; the elements. High-fantastical. Very fanciful. ■ Hight. Called; named. High-tides. Solemn festivals. 102 High top-gallant. The summit of a top-gallant mast of a ship; a mast above the "gallant," which is immediately above the mainmast. High-wrought. Lifted up. Hild. Held. Hilding. A poltroon; a., paltry; cowardly. Hint. Suggestion. Hip. Amongst the Lancashire and Cornish wrestlers it was held to be an advantage to grip an adversary by the hip ; whence the phrase, "If I can catch him once upon the hip " — a queer expression in Shyloctts mouth. Hiren. A great part of the slang and braggart language of some of Shakespeare's characters must be conjectural. When .Pistol {Henry IV) says, "Have we not Hiren here?" it has been supposed that he was quoting from an old play called Irene, then acting, in which the fair Calipolis, to whom he alludes, is mentioned. But Pis- tol would hardly have used the word, as it was not applicable to the moment. Other commentators have, with greater reason, suggested that, as Pistol is flour- ishing his sword as he speaks, he means to say, "Have we not iron here?" Nym calls his sword his "iron." Falstaff speaks of his as a "toasting-iron." His. Often used for "its." His coctus. (Lat.) "These things are tormenting." Hit. To agree. Hoar. Aged; mouldy. Hoar-dock. A wild flower. Hoar-leaves. White leaves. Hobnob. A corruption of hap or nehap — " Come what may ;" "That depends on circumstances." A clinking together of wine or beer glasses in a toast, tete a tete, is called hobnobbing. Hobby-horse. In the character figured in an old rustic enter- tainment composed mainly of the Robin Hood family (Maid Marian, Friar Tuck, &c.) a mock horse was intro- duced, formed of basket-work, and borne by a man who seemed to bestride and give it motion ; but, after a time, this figure became an excrescence of the pageant, and was gradually discontinued; whence the line, ' ; The hobby- 103 horse is forgot." A hobby or hobby-horse also meant a person's fancy, and is still in use. Hobgoblins. Imps of darkness; creatures of a disordered fancy. Hoise. To hoist ; raise up. Hold, v. To esteem; interjec, hold! stop! stay! Also, to agree with ; maintain ; keep faith. Holding. The chorus or refrain in a glee. It originates in the suspension of the breath for a time. Hold-taking. Beer-handling. Holds on. Firmly maintains. Holiday. As applied to language, choice, select. Holla! An old term in equitation. Holp. Helped. Holmedon. On the Scottish border, the scene of a contest in the reign of Henry IV. Holykood day. The 14th September. A festal day in cele- bration of the recovery by the Emperor Heraclius of a piece of the Holy Cross, (rood,) which, 600 years after the death of Jesus Christ, was carried from Jerusalem by Cyrus, King of Assyria. Holy-water. In general acceptance, water that has been consecrated by a Roman Catholic priest. " Court holy- water,'" as used by the Fool in King Lear, implies a contrast to rain. Home. To the uttermost. Homely. Plain person ; uncultivated ; simple. Home-keeping. Untravelled; disinclined to travel abroad. Honesty. Truth; propriety; liberality. Honey. A preface to moral or personal sweetness; as, "honey heavy dew" — slumber as nice as honey and refreshing as dew; "honey sweet" — a term of endearment. Honey-seed. A corruption (Mrs. Quickly, passim) of homi- cide. Honey stalks. Red clover. Honey-suckle. A corresponding corruption of homicidal. Honi soit qui mal y pense. (Honi, the ancient Norman word for honte, shame.) "Shame, or evil, to him who think- eth evil of this" — a phrase embroidered on the Garter of the Order, (K. G.,) and encircling the English coat-of- 104 arms. It is said to have originated with Edward III, when he exhibited the garter which had fallen from the leg of the Countess of Salisbury, with whom His Maj- esty had been dancing. The exclamation, afterwards crystallized, happily deprecated unworthy suspicions of the lady's chastity. Honor. A courteous appellation. "Your honor;" "his honor." Honorable dangerous. Rather a comprehensive and convert- ible term. " There is honor in the danger ;" " there is danger in honorable work." Hood, n. The part of a cloak which covered the head. Worn at masquerades, it was called a domino — probably be- cause such cloaks and hoods were worn by Dominican friars and other monks. But the hood was not always regarded as a symbol of sanctity. Cucullus not facit monachum — "the hood does not make the monk" — passed into a proverb when the venality of the profes- sors of holiness in monasteries was exposed, v., to cover or hide. "I will hood mine eyes." It was likewise a term in falconry. The hawk's eyes were covered until the game was espied, when the hood was removed and the bird's legs loosened for night. Shakespeare uses it as a figure in Romeo and Juliet — "Hood my unmann'd blood bating in my cheeks ;" and Gratiano says he will " hood his eyes " with his hat daring divine service as an outward mark of respect and attention. Hoodman blind. The old appellation of "blindman's buff." Made blind by having a hood drawn over the head and eyes. Hooked nose. The ancient Roman nose. Hoops. Quart pots. Hop'd for day. A suggestion as to the importance of "mak- ing hay while the sun shines." Horn. It is typical at once of the grossness of the age and the incontinency prevailing in married circles in the six- teenth and seventeenth centuries, that this word should be so frequently employed by Shakespeare to indicate the risks which a man incurs in matrimony. The horns of a beast denote its promiscuous amours, and a man was said to have been cornuted (horned) when his wife had been, or was, unfaithful to her vows. 105 Horned moon. Shrewd attempts have been made to show a connection between this term and the lanthorn carried by the "man in the moon." {Midsummer -Night's Dream.) It is, however, a term of considerable antiquity, and refers to the crescent shape of the young moon. Robert Burns makes use of the idea in one of his songs : " It is the mune, I ken her horn." Horologe. A clock ; a time-piece indicating the hour. (Fi\, derived from Latin.) Hornpipe. A solo dance. Hot at hand. Under a slight restraint. Hot-house. A bagnio ; a house of ill-fame. How ? An idiomatic and elliptical use of the question, " How much 1 ?" or "What say you?" House. The etymon of " husband." Hox, (hough.) To hamstring. Hugger-mugger. Confused ; slovenly ; secretly. Hull. To float, without a rudder ; to sway ; to swing ; ships at anchor ; nautically, to lie to. Humming. Overwhelming. Humphrey hour. The hour when poor men "dined with Duke Humphrey '' — a proverbial expression denoting that when they had no means of procuring a dinner they were accustomed to promenade the aisle in St. Paul's Cathedral called " Duke Humphrey's walk." The Duke ( Gloucester) is represented in Henry VI (First Part) as a worthy nobleman, treacherously put to death. Humphrey. The name of an actor who played one of the park- keepers in Act 3, Henry VI Humble-bees. A modern writer points out that Shakespeare did not quite understand the economy of the bee. He pictures a colony of bees as a kingdom, with "A king and officers of sorts,'' (see Henry V,) whereas a colony of bees is an absolute democracy ; the rulers and governors and " officers of sorts." are the workers, the masses, the common people. A strict regard to i#ct also would spoil those fairy tapers in Midsummer -Night's Dream " — " The honey-bags steal from the humble-bees, And, for night-tapers, crop their waxen thighs, And light them at the fiery glow-worm's eyes," — 106 since it is not wax that bees bear upon their thighs, but pollen, the dust of the flowers, with which bees make their bread. Wax is made from honey. Humor. Fancy ; mood ; inclination ; idiosyncrasy ; disposi- tion ; a feeling that governs passion. Perhaps Ben Jon- son, who wrote an admirable comedy entitled " Every Man in his Humor," offers the best definition of the term : " When some one peculiar faculty Doth so possess a man that it shall draw All his effects, his spirits, and his powers In their complexions all to run one way, This may be truly said to be 'a humor. ' " Shakespeare illustrates and confirms this disposition in Shylock. The word "humor" is now popularly con- fined to a definition of drollery, wit, satire. Humorous. Damp ; humid. Hungry. Unprolific. Hungry beach. Sterile land near the sea. Hunt-counter. A worthless dog that cannot follow the scent ; also, a limb of the law attending the "compter," an ancient police station and magisterial court. Hunts up. A morning call ; a hunting 'reveillee. Hungarian. Not a native of Hungary, but, in the slang of the age, a term of contempt. Hurly-burly. Noise ; tumult. Hurt. Harm : injury. Hurtle. To dash against ; violent disturbance ; loud noise. Hurtling. Boisterous mirth. Husband, v. To marry ; care for. Husbandry Industry ; thrift. Huswife. A jilt ; a hussey. Hybla. Ancient writers affirm that a mountain of this name in Sicily was famous for the honey produced by the bees, which gathered their materiel from the flowers which grew on the mountain. Hydra. The many-headed monster which Hercules' slew. Hyrcanium. Of Hyrcania, a woody* country in Turkistan ; the eastern shore of the Caspian sea. 107 I. This vowel is often used by Shakespeare as a pun on " Ay " — yes — which corresponds with it in sound. Icebrook. Temper. Ides. A Roman division of months. The Ides fell on the 15th March, May, July, and October. The other months were called Calends or Nones. Idle, ad. Barren; desert; silly, empty, as to speech; v., to waste time — do absolutely nothing. I' feeks. In faith! — an old ejaculation. Ignomy. Ignominy. Ilium. Priam's place of residence, as indicated in Homer's Iliad. Ill erected. Raised for evil purposes. Ill inhabited. Ill lodged. Illustrious. Without lustre, (or with !) Images. Children ; representatives. Imbar, or Imbare, v. To lay bare ; expose. Imagination. This quality " all compact " is derived from "antique fables, fairy toys, &c, &c." (See Theseus, 1st scene of Midsummer- NigMs Dream.) Imitari. Imitative. Immanity. Barbarity. Immediacy. Close connection ; superiority in rank and power. Immoment. Unimportant. Imp. A stripling; a diminutive demon; also, v., a term in falconry, to graft artificial feathers on the wing of a bird that has lost some of its plumage. Impair. Unsuitable ; unworthy. Impale. To encircle. Impartial. Partial. Impawn. To stake ; compromise. Impeachment. Impediment ; a reproach. Imperator. A great commander. Imperious. Imperial. Imperseverant. Dull of apprehension. Impertinency. Not relevant ; extraneous. Impetticose. To pocket. Impone. To wager, pledge, or pawn. 108 Importance. Importunity ; import. Impoktant. Importunate. Importing. Meaning ; significant. Importune. To urgently beg or entreat. In utterance, the accent is sometimes on the ultimate, sometimes on the penultimate, according to the measure of the line in which the word occurs. Impose. An injunction ; command. Imposition. A duty or condition imposed on one individual by another. Impossible. Incredible. Imposthume. An abscess "that inward breaks." Impout. Supply a deficiency. Imprese. A device with a motto attached. Impress, v. To press or force into the public service ; n., the heraldic motto on a coat-of-arms. Imprisoned angels. Money enclosed in a chest. Vide Angel. Incapable. Deficient of intelligence. In capite. (Lat.) In chief ; a term in law signifying a king's claim to a subject's fealty or his head ; literally, in mod- ern times, a capitation tax. Incarnadine. To dye a red color. Incensed. Informed; instructed; instigated. Inch-meal. Doled out by inches. Incision. The proposal of the Prince of Morocco {Merchant of Venice) to bleed himself simply to show that his blood was as red as that of any of the other suitors of Portia was characteristic of the African. The practice of wounding themselves in proof of what they would readily undergo for the woman of their choice and affec- tion is common also among certain classes of Asiatics. Inclining. Compliant; following; alliance. Inclip. To embrace. Include. To conclude. Inclusive. Enclosed. Incompt. Subject to account. Incony. Delicate; pretty; unknown; ignorant. Incorrect. Ill regulated. Incontinently. Immediately. Inde. Shakespeare knew but little of India, (naturally,) or 109 he would not have classed her intelligent people with '"savages." Indent. To sign a contract ; to temporize. Incorporate. United in one body. Index. Prologue; indication. Indifferent. Tolerably; impartial. Indirectly. Opposed to the direct and straightforward. Indigest. Confused; chaotic. Indirection. Irregularly; dishonestly. Indite. To convict. Inducement. Companionship and example. Induction. Preparation; commencement; prologue. Indurance. Delay. Inequality. Of inferior rank. Infected. Poisoned. Infer. To report. Infinite. Extent or power. Informal. Deranged. Ingraft. Grafted. Inhabitable. Uninhabitable. Ingaged. Unengaged. Inherit. Possess; adopt. Inhibit. To prevent ; forbid ; decline. The passage in Mac- beth, "If, trembling, I inhibit thee," has given rise to much feeble and useless discussion. It seems clear from the context that Macbeth dares Banquets Ghost to fight with him. He will not "inhibit" or prevent the action of the Ghost. Inhibition. A euphuism for "prevention;" stoppage, or prohi- bition. Inhooped. Caged. The Romans delighted in cock or quail fights, and to prevent the birds from getting away dur- ing a contest they enclosed them in an arena formed of iron hoops. Inkle. A kind of narrow tape. Iniquity. Another appellation of the Vice or Harlequin in the old Moralities. Prince Henry calls Falstaff a "grey- beard iniquity" a "reverend vice." In good time. A propos y "a la bonne heure y" a fortunate moment; "all right." 110 Initiate. Young. Inkhorn. A horn usually suspended to the button-hole of the coat of book-worms to hold ink for immediate use ; whence the term "inkhorn mate" came to be scornfully applied to a pedant or a student at the book-stalls. Inland. Civilized — in contradistinction to the people dwell- ing on the sea-coast, where education was rarely obtained. In little. A miniature likeness. It is on this reference to the sums people were said by Hamlet to be ready to pay for portraits of his father that the conjecture has been hazarded that the Prince should carry a minia- ture suspended from his neck, while the Queen wears that of her husband, the King de facto. But the de- scription which Hamlet gives of his father's "station," like " the herald Mercury on a heaven-kissing hill," would seem to destroy the notion that the portrait could be represented in a miniature. Equally objectionable is the idea that the portraits of the two kings appear on the arras, for there was no scenery employed at the theatre in Shakespeare's time in which such paintings could have been given. The whole speech, describing the deceased as embodying the forms of all the gods, is probably founded on the objects pictured to Hamlet's imagination alone. Inly. Inward. Inn of court. Colleges and lodgings for law students, pre- sided over by special law societies. Young barristers in England are said to be "entered" of a certain inn of court, of which there are four in the city of London. Innocent, n. An idiot. I'th'. Brief for "in the." In place. Present. Inquisition. A court of inquiry ; an examination. Insane. A cause of insanity. Insconced. Fortified. Insculped. See Angel. Insinuation. Interference in any matter. Insistence. Persistence. Instance. Intelligence ; suggestion ; proof, in evidence. Instances. Proverbs ; motions ; purposes and action. Ill Insuppressive. Incapable of suppression. Inseparate. Inseparable. Insuit. Solicitation. Integrity. Consistency; completeness. Intend. Pretend; purpose. Intending. Regarding; pretending. Intendment. Intention. Intention. Eager desire. Intentively. Attentively. Intents. Purposes; endeavors. Interres'd. Interested. Inter'gatories. An abridgment of interrogatories — a law term used in setting forth the details of an examination. Intermission. Pause; hesitation. Intervallums. Pauses; intervals. Intrenchant. Intrenchment ; what cannot be cloven. Intrinse. Intricate. Intrinsic ate. Intricate. Investing. Clothing. Investments. White "investments" constituted the robes or rochet of bishops. Invincible. Not to be computed. Invites nubibus. (Lat.) "The unwilling clouds." Inward. Intimate. Inward motion. Intellectual faculty. Inwardness. Intimacy. Ira furor brevis est. (Lat.) "Anger is brief madness." Iris. The colors of the rainbow. "They round the eye" when it has been wetted with tears. (All's Well that Ends Well.) It is also the name of the rainbow as Jove's messenger. Irish rats. These animals, having no taste for music or poetry, were, it was thought, to be got rid of by hum- ming an old tune. * Irks. Annoys; distresses. Iron. Clad in armor. Irregulous. The reverse of regular and good, morally and materially. Issue. Result or termination. Iterance. Iteration; repetition. 112 Iteration. Recitation. Ivy. See Bush. Jack. A common fellow ; a knave. " Playing the jack with us" corresponded with "playing us knavish tricks." In a pack of cards one of the court or trump cards, called the "jack," is S3 r nonymous with "knave." Jack. A small bowl in a game of bowls. Jacks. Contemptible swaggerers. Jack and Jill. Generic titles for a man and a woman asso- ciated. Jack-guardent. A jack in office. Jack o 'lent. A puppet thrown at by boys for sport during Lent. The term was also brief for "jack o' lantern," the ignis fatu us which floats over marshy land, mislead- ing "night wanderers." Jack o' the clock. A little figure on a clock, which seems mechanically to strike the hour. Jacob's staff. Shylock, swearing by this, refers to the pas- sage in the Bible, "With roy staff," &c. Gen. xxxii, verse 10. Jade. A worthless woman ; a worn-out horse. Jaded. Fatigued ; mastered ; bullied ; n., a jaded groom meant a low fellow. Jakes. A place of necessary resort. Janus. A myth ; an inferior deity represented with two faces to indicate the possession of the faculty of beholding at once the past, the present, and the future. Iago ( Othello) and Gratiano {Merchant of Venice) swear by Janus for no other apparent reason that it was, and is, the prac- tice of the Italians, though chiefly Roman Catholics, to invoke one of the heathen gods. Per Glove I Corpo di Bacco ! (by Jove! by the body of Bacchus!) are con- stantly on their lips. Jangling. Harsh ; out of tune. Jar. The tick of a clock. Jars. Quarrels ; differences. Jauncing. Rough riding. Jaundice. A disease which, arising from an excess of bile, turns the skin yellow. 113 Jay. A loose woman. The Italians use the word putta or puth to indicate a harlot ; but the word likewise applies to a bird of the crow family. Jeronimy. A corruption of Hieronymus, the hero of a Span- ish tragedy, who uses words corresponding with those of the Spanish. Je pense. (Fr.) "I think." Scene feom Henry V, Act IV. French Soldier. Je pense que vous estes le gentilhomme de bonne qualitc 1 . T believe that you are a gentleman of good quality. French Soldier. O Seigneur Dieu ! Lord God ! French Soldier. O prennez misericorde ! ayez pitie de moy ! be merciful! Have pity on me! French Soldier. Est-il impossible d'eschapper la force de ton bras ? Is it impossible to escape the strength of your arm ? French Soldier. O pardonnez moy! forgive me! Boy. Escoutez ; comment estes vous appelle ! Listen ! How are you called ? — i. e., what is your name ? French Soldier. Monsieur le Fer. French Soldier. Que dit-il, monsieur ? What does he say, sir f Boy. II me commande de vous dire que vous faites vous prest ; car ce soldat icy est dispose tout a cette heure de couper vostre gorge. He commands me to tell you to get ready, for this soldier is disposed to immediately cut your throat French Soldier. O je vous supplie pour l'amour de Dieu, me par- donner ! Je suis gentilhomme de bonne maison ; gardez ma vie et je vous donneray deux cents escus. Oh, I beg of you for the love of God to forgive me. I am a gentleman of a good family {house.) Spare my life, and I will give you two hun- . dred crowns. French Soldier. Petit monsieur, que dit-il ? Little gentleman, what says he ? Boy Encore qu'il est contre son jurement de pardonner aucun prisonnier ; neanmoins, pour les escus que vous l'avez promis, il est contentde vous donner la liberte, le franchisement. Again, that it is contrary to his oath to pardon {liberate) any prisoner; nevertheless, for the crowns that you have promised him, he is content to give you liberty — enfranchisement. French Soldier. Sur mes genoux je vous donne mille remerciemens ; et je m'estime heureux que je suis tombe entre les mains d'un chevalier, je pense, leplus brave, valliant, et tres distingue seigneur d'Angleterre. On my knees I give you a thousand thanks ; and I esteem myself 10 114 happy that I have fallen into the hands of a knight who, I think, is the bravest, most valiant, and distinguished nobleman of England. Boy. Suivez vous le grand capitaine. Follow the great captain. Jephthah. The reference to the " Judge of Israel " and his daughter in Hamlet springs from the fact of the mel- ancholy story having formed the subject of an ancient and popular ballad as well as a fact in Scripture. Jerkin. A short frock, sometimes made of leather and wadded. What Stephano ( Tempest) means is a problem. He may refer to the practice (nearly extinct) on board ship of shaving a man as the vessel crosses the equinoctial line, or to the removal of the hairy skin which covers Caliban. Jerusalem. It had been prophesied that if Henry IV carried out his purpose of heading a crusade to Palestine, he would die in Jerusalem. Nominally to fulfil the predic- tion, he retires to the Jerusalem chamber in his palace that he may die there. Jesses. The ligature by which the hawk in falconry is at- tached to the wrist of the falconer. The jesses were loosened when the bird was dispatched after the quarry. Jest. To take part in an entertainment. Jet. In walking, to strut Jewel. See Toad. Jewess' eye. An organ capable of appreciating a handsome Christian. Jigging. Dancing ; rhyming. Jig maker. The author of a low class of song. Jill. A young woman ; a drinking measure. John a Dreams. A current designation of a heavy, dull sort of person. It is vain to attempt to trace the origin of this and other of the obsolete nicknames in Shakesj)eare. John Drum. John, or Jack, in Tom Drum's entertainment, is recorded to have been derived from a farce in which Drum is represented as an intriguing servant who con- stantly gets into scrapes. The personal servant or valet of a gentleman is the scamp and scapegoat of many dramas of all nations, as Martin, (Fr.,) Leporello, (Sp.,) Figaro, (Ital.,) &c. John — " King John." This play was obviously founded on an older one called " The troublesome reign of King John." 115 Joint ring. Two rings joined together, illustrative of the close tie of affection. See Gimmal. Journal. Daily. Jovial. Pertaining to Jove. Jowls. Thrown down ; cast out. Joy. To enjoy. Judas. In old paintings the betrayer is always represented with red hair. Judicious. Critical ; capable of judgment. Julius C^sar. This interesting play, which follows the his- tory of the close of Csesar's life with considerable accu- racy, was, in all likelihood, borrowed from Plutarch. In that event it is singular that no mention is made by Plutarch of the dying exclamation of the great soldier — "J&t tu, Brute /" — if, indeed, he ever did utter the words. At any rate, his surprise at being assailed by the man he so deeply loved must have been felt, if not verbally expressed ; and on this point Plutarch is exact and de- scriptive. It was a saying in the sixteenth century that there were two Charles V: one made by nature and one by Titian. Perhaps the same thing might be said of every histor- ical personage that Shakespeare has delineated. There are two : one presented by history and one by Shakes- peare. In nearly every instance his sketches are what we would term historically correct, so far as a strict adherence to historical statement of facts can make them so ; but they are so much more than historically correct ; they are so wondrously life-like. History gives us but a mere outline of any particular character. We are too apt to have the picture only in the silhouette form — either all light or all shadow. Seldom indeed do we know these historical personages as simple men or women. As presented by the partisan chronicler, they appear either a little less or a little more than human. It requires the genius of Shakespeare to breathe into these images the breath of life, and make of them men and women whom we know to be of like passions with ourselves, and whom, therefore, we can comprehend and love. The play of Julius Ccesar is a good illustration 116 of this. Who but Shakespeare could have placed com- mon-place people of the nineteenth century so thor- oughly in sympathy with an age utterly unlike our own? An age in which everything was in extremes, when there were no quietists and positively no moderate men, would be most enigmatical for us were it not for that revivify- ing genius which has brought it back within the realms of the real. What he has done for the age itself he has done pre-eminently for the man Julius Caesar. History presents Caesar to us as a general, or an intriguer for power only. We see him simply as he poses for the public eye ; we know what he said on this occasion and what he did on that. But it was reserved for Shakes- peare to tell us what he was and how he felt ; to make our actual acquaintance with him as a man a possibility. In every history of Caesar, including his own commen- taries, he appears like some gigantic shadow ; and his figure is impressive indeed, but somewhat vague. How completely is all this changed when the magic wand of Shakespeare touches him; that touch is his accolade. At once and forever he is received into the full dignity and vivid reality of his order; he is made a man, and we know him almost as we know one another. But for Shakespeare's clear-cut picture of him, we should never have known and felt for Caesar as we now do. By that indefinable faculty of sympathy which he possessed in such an eminent degree, Shakespeare had the ability to throw himself completely into whatever character he was describing. Given the natural disposition and sur- roundings of a man, he knew intuitively just what that man would feel or say or do on any special occasion, because he knew what he himself would do if similarly placed. It was not so much a projecting of himself into the character as it was allowing the character to take complete possession of him, for his self-con scious- ness is so utterly lost in the intensity of his sympathy that there is absolutely nothing subjective in his repre- sentations. .For the time being Shakespeare has no independent existence, but is the man or woman he por- trays. We do not discover him behind the mask, for 117 there is no mask; his characters are living, breathing men and women. We never see him in &uy play he has written ; for the moment he is Lear, Othello, or Ccesar. So it is that they appear to us as veritable flesh and blood, not merely as soulless tenements of painted dust. It is Shakespeare who makes us see "the angry spot that glows on Caesar's brow. 1 ' The little fact of Ccesar' 8 partial deafness is impressed upon us : "Come upon my right side, for this ear is deaf." We see him a man of "feeble temper," a victim of epilepsy, foaming at the mouth and speechless. Later we see him drinking wine with his friends, and joking with his reckless favorite, Antony. We see him donning his robe, that robe which we learn to love and almost regard as a sentient thing, when Antony tells us "through this rent the well- beloved Brutus stabbed." So much for the outward man so vividly presented ; but our insight goes much deeper, for Shakespeare shows us the man's mind as historians never do. He is sus- picious: "Yond' Cassius has a lean and hungry look; he thinks too much. Such men are dangerous." He is public-spirited: "What touches us ourselves shall be last served." He is superstitious: "What say the au- gurers?" "Thrice hath Calphurnia in her sleep cried out. Help! ho! they murder Caesar!" He is polite: "I thank you for your pains and courtesy ; I am to blame to be thus waited for." He is positive: "Know Caesar doth no wrong. Doth not Brutus bootless kneel?" He is philosophical and somewhat of a fatalist, as per- sons who think deeply are apt to be: "What can be avoided whose ends are purposed by the mighty gods?" "Death, the necessary end, will come when it will come." He is brave and full of a sublime faith in himself: " The things that threatened me ne'er looked but on my back." "Wilt thou lift up Olympus?" "Always I am Caesar." And, alas! he was ambitious: "He put the coronet by ; but, for all that, he would fain have had it." By such inimitable touches does Shakespeare pre- sent to us the man Ccesar as history can never do. Our wonder is enhanced when we remember that such noble US work is done for a character subordinate in the play, for Ctesar is far from being the hero, Antony and Brutus both being much more prominent, and Brutus unques- tionably the author's favorite, "the noblest Roman of them all." Jump, v. To guess ; suppose ; to agree with ; to dispense with ; shorten ; pass over ; ad., coincident ; correspond- ing with. Jure. To swear on oath. Justicee. A judge. Jut, or Jet. A projection — whence "jetty;" v., to throw; encroach ; " collide with." Juvenal. A youth. K Kaiser. Caesar. Kam. Kim-kam ; all awry. Karrack. An Italian merchant ship. Kicksey. Hemlock. Keech. A lump of lard or fat. Keel. To cool. Keep. To dwell; reside; entertain. Keep house. Stop at home. Keeper. A park or game-keeper. Kendal green. A cloth manufactured at Kendal, in West- moreland. Kent. A midland county in England. It has always enjoyed credit for the fertility of the soil and the gallantry of the men ; wherefore Gcesar extolled it. Kernes. Stanislaus, who describes the Kerne as armed with sword and target, says: "The word Kern signifies a shower of hell, because the Kernes were taken for no better than rakehells, or the Devil's blackguards." The mercenaries of this appellation who served in wars were from the north of Ireland and the western highlands of Scotland. Kersey. An old woollen garment. Kibe. A sore on the heel ; a chilblain. Kickshaws. A corruption of quelque chose, (Fr., "some- thing.") Trifles; side dishes; condiments; anything. 119 Kicky wicky, or Kicksy wicks y. Applicable to a jade, whether horse or woman. Killingworth. The old name of "Kenilworth." Kiln-hole. The ash-hole beneath a kiln ; also, the chimnej 7 - corDer; a gossiping place. Kin. When Hamlet, commenting aside on the King's calling him his "cousin and his son," says, "A little more than kin and less than kind,'' he probably means that the King has got a little beyond the n in "kin" without reaching the d in "kind." Kind. Nature ; of the same nature. Kindle. To bring forth young animals ; to urge ; egg on. Kindless. Unnatural. Kindly. Naturally. Kinged. Ruled by a monarch. Kirtle. A jacket and mantle in one piece, sometimes with and sometimes without sleeves. Kitchen- malkin. Scullion ; kitchen w T ench. See Malkin. • Knacks. Knick-knacks. See Gawds, &c. Knap. To snap ; break short off. Knave. A servant; a rogue. To "bear the knave" is to sub- mit to being called by opprobrious names. The word was also used in a friendly sense, as "honest knaves." Knee. To bow down in homage. "Knee his throne." (King JLear.) "Knee the way into his mercy." (Coriolanus.) Knives. When guests were invited to a banquet in remote times, each man took his own knife with him. (See Timon of Athens.) The practice is perpetuated in the Highland costume, the knife being worn in the hose. Knock it. Expressive of orchestral music, as now familiarly called "playing up " " Let the music knock it." Knot. A gang ; a combination. Knots. Flowers planted in box, to form a cluster. Knot grass. A herb that was, in former times, supposed to have the property of checking the growth of a child to whom it might be given as food. Know. To acknowledge. Knowing. Accomplishment; attainment. Know of. To reason ; consider. 120 Kybe, or Kibe. An ulcerated chilblain, or a sore on the heel. Key-cold. An iron key retains its surface temperature long- after its application to a warm body. The intensity is of service, if applied to the spine, in stopping hemor- rhage. The cold operates on the nervous system. Label. Bond; confirmation. Labias. A slender fist; also, "lips." Laced mutton. A gross term for a loose woman. Lackeying. Behaving obsequiously. Lade. To drain earth dry. La fin couronne le tout, ou les ceuvres. (Fr.) "The end crowns all, or all works." Lag. The rabble; ad., slow; late. Lakin. Lady kin. "By'r Lakin," or "By our Lady Kind," * was a common form of adjuring the Holy Virgin. Lambkins. Young sheep. Lammas-tide. The month of August. Lampedusa. In a brochure, long since forgotten, one Joseph Hunter, an antiquarian, endeavored to show that this little island in the Mediterranean was the one selected by Shakespeare for the abode of Prospero. (Tempest.) Lances. Men bearing spears. Land-dam. A process of stopping the flow of water, and a phrase for making a place too hot for an offender against usage. Land rakers. Travellers afoot. Lane. The "'strait lane," the locality of the retreat of Cym- beline's army before the Roman, affords the occasion for a description by Posthumus of the heroic deeds of Bela- rius and his two putative sons, which, though imaginary, finc^s its parallel in the defence of the bridge by Hora- tius, and later in the repulse of three thousand Russian troopers by three hundred British cavalry at Balaklava. When soldiers are "confident in act" they perform prodigies of valor. Marathon and Thermopylae are cases in point Lapsed. Apprehended ; made prisoner. 121 Lapwing. A bird that has the credit of being able, by its pe- culiar cry, to lead people from the vicinity of its nest. Lard. To decorate ; grease ; fertilize. Large. Free ; wanton. Largesse. Bounty. Lass lorn. Forsaken by one's mistress. Latch, or Catch. To lay hold of ; to smear. From licher, (Ft.) Latched. Closed up. Lated. Belated ; benighted. Late. Lately. Latruite. See Truite, (Fr.) Latten. Thin as a lath. Laugher. A jester, or a person easily moved to mirth. Launch. Lance. Laund. A plain lying between two forests. Launde. A lawn. Laundering. Wetting ; washing. Lavolta. (Ital.) A dance, of which leaping or up-springing was a feature. Law of arms. Down to the middle of the 16th century, men settled their disputes in a combat, but the authority of the King was necessary before a " trial by battle " could take place. In a case where one man accused another of a crime, the death of the vanquished (accused) in a combat was held to have proved his guilt. Law of Heraldry. Law and proclamation. The legal com- pact as sealed, certified, and publicly advertised. Lear. Unquestionably the finest and most affecting of the plays of Shakespeare. Nowhere has Shakespeare shown greater creative power than in that weird, crazed old man, Lear. He had only to paint melancholy in his Hamlet, jealousy in Othello, and avarice in Shy lock, and, with Lear, the picture w r as complete. In Lear, we see a combination of as varied passions as there are dif- ferent emotions in the human heart. Now Pity looks down upon us from the canvas, then Revenge, here Pride, there Humility, sometimes Love, oftener Hate, all setting off the face of an old man, appalling in its agony, and terrible in its madness. 11 122 It is in the supernatural Lear that Shakespeare displays his wonderful genius. The man loses his identity, and becomes a god — a raving fury. Who would not sooner meet Mars himself than that raving, old, nlaltreated King, with his streaming hair, grizzly countenance, and ghostly eyes, wandering over that lonely heath, as he is pelted by hail, and blown about by the wind and rain, crying in his maniacal voice, " Spit fire ! spout rain ! singe my whitehead?" Pandemonium itself could not exhibit so hideous a pic- ture as that muddy hut and its surroundings, nor the infernal council so diabolical a phantasm as the " mock trial." The supernatural in Milton's Satan was pro- duced as much by his appearance as his sentiments. We see him ''■ Prone on the flood, extended long and large, and hear his voice Call so loud that all the hollow deep of hell resounded," while Lear is nowhere described, and his voice some- times sounds like falling leaves, often like a child's prattle, and again like rolling thunder. The super- natural in Satan is seen in his entrance into Pandemo- nium, his encounter with Sin and Death, his journeys through chaos, and his battle with the angels. Lear and Satan ! alike, yet unlike, human, yet superhuman, must ever be regarded as the sublimest conceptions of their kind in fiction. One of the many writers of modern times, himself pre- eminent for critical discernment and good taste, thus writes of the play : The noble tragedy of "King Lear" has long stood, by the unani- mous judgment of critics, pre-eminent for sublimity and pathos, among the majestic creations of Shakspere's mighty mind. The subject of this drama is drawn from a period far removed among the mists of antiquity, and obscured by the shadows of legend and tradition — an age of heathenism aud barbarism. And yet, with the rough stones hewn out of this rude quarry, the master- mason has constructed a shapely and imposing edifice, which has been the delight of all the generations of worshippers that have crowded the shrines of his genius. The dependency of genius upon antecedent laborers to provide it with the raw material to be woven into its wondrous fabrics has been frequently illustrated in literary history, but in no case 123 more clearly than in the history of this particular play of Shake- speare's. The original of the story is found in Geoffrey of Monmouth, an old Welsh chronicler, who, during the twelfth century, occupied the leisure of his convent-life in recording, in his monkish Latin, the legendary narrations which had been compiled by an un- known predecessor, in the Welsh tongue, from oral traditions and ballads and such sources, and entitled the " Chronicle of the Kings of the Isle of Britain." Lege Domine. (Lat.) Read, my Lord. Dominus (house- holder, master, lord) was with our forefathers an hono- rary prefix corresponding to the modern Mr. (which is also Latin, viz : magister, syncopated to mayster, mai- stre, master, mister,) and applied to persons of considera- tion. In the fourteenth century it was abbreviated to Danz and Dan. The now universal Mr. has finally ex- pelled its rival Dan. In Portuguese and in Spanish, on the contrary, it is dominus that has triumphed, remain- iog in those languages as the ordinary prefatory titles of respect, Dom and Don. The use of Dan by the English as a complimentary prefix continued even lo the beginning of the Elizabethan era, for we find Spencer calling Chaucer " Dan Geoffrey,' 1 and the Earl of Surrey, in the reign of Henry VIII, wrote of " Dan Homer." Lay, n. A wager ; a bet ; a stake ; ad., one of the laity. Lay by ! The challenge of highwaymen to passengers to " stand and deliver," and remain quiet while they were being robbed of their property. Lazar-like. Covered with tatters and sores like Lazarus — the result of poison. Shakespeare seems to have been fa- miliar with the variety of poisons used by the Italians. He lived in an age when poisons were in frequent use for deadly purposes. League, Leaguer — from the German " Lager " — a besieging camp. Learn. To teach or learn. Lease. To lie. Leash. Leading- string. Leasing. Speaking falsely. Leather-coats. Russet apples. Leathern jerkin. A jacket or doublet of buff leather. With the addition of crystal buttons the garment was much fancied by persons of the middle class. 124 Leavened. Matured. Le cheval volant. (Fr.) The flying horse. Leech. A surgeon addicted to phlebotomizing his patients. Leer. Complexion ; look. Leets. Courts of law for periodical adjudications in small cases. Leer-look. Not always immodest. Leg. Obeisance. Legerity. Alertness ; light and sprightly. Leges. Alleges. Leiger. An Envoy Extraordinary ; a distant Ambassador. Le jour est perdu. (Fr.) The day is lost! Leman. A mistress ; a paramour. Lend. Impart ; to lend a grace was understood to confer one ; also, to listen ; attend. Leno. A pander. Leonatus. Sprung from a lion. Lenten. Poor fare ; such as is supposed to distinguish fast- ing days during Lent. Lenten pie. A game pie. L'Envoy. Literally a message, but usually employed at the close of a book, either as a complimentary dedication or as descriptive of the purpose of the work. It forms the "moral" of French ballads or songs. Lepidus. This triumvir was a man of weak intellect, held in contempt by Mark Antony. (Julius Ccesar.) His im- becility is the subject of quiet ridicule by the Romans who accost him on his return from Egypt. (Antony and Cleopatra.) Let. To hinder. Let, v. To stop ; stay. Le Roy. (Le Roi, Fr.) The king. Lethe. The stream which effaced the past from the mem- ory of those who bathed in its waters. Letter. Recommendation to favor. Letters patent. An official document conveying a privi- # lege or conferring rank. Leviathan. The monster of the deep alluded to in the Bible — whether a whale or a sea-serpent is unknown. Possibly a shark, because alleged to be carnivorous ; the whale cannot swallow a human being. 125 Letched. Licked over. Level. A direct line. Lewd. Idle ; knavish. Lewdsters. Disreputable persons. Levy. To raise ; recruit a force. Leopards. A crest in heraldry. It was the crest of the House of Howard, and in ancient representations of English heraldry the lion passant gardant was so like a leopard that the idea prevailed that it was the Royal crest also. But in the middle of the fifteenth century the idea was dissipated and the Lion was the acknowledged English crest. Shakespeare makes Richard II speak of the lion as the emblem of English sovereignty — " Lions make leopards tame," — but as Richard reigned in the four- teenth century the allusion is anachronic. Napoleon I, who did not relish the application of any superior at- tribute to Great Britain, always spoke of his British ad- versaries as " les leopard sy Level. To aim ; guess ; an object aimed at. Libbard. The leopard. Liberal. Too free ; licentious. Liberty. Libertinism. License. Licentiousness. Lichas. The page of Hercules, as Alcides. Lief. " As lief ;" as soon as ; as readily as. Liefest. Dearest. Lies. Besides ; abides. Leiger. A resident ; an ambassador. Liegemen. Men who had vowed allegiance to the sovereign. " My Liege " was often used for " Your Majesty." Lieu. *(Fr.; In place of. Lieutenantry. Perfunctorily ; working by a deputy. Life. See "Wife." Lifter. A thief Now confined in use to one who slyly steals in a shop ; a " shop-lifter ; " a person addicted to kleptomania. Lightly. Commonly ; ordinarily ; of little value. Light o' love. The title of an old tune. Like and Unlike. To compare. Likelihood. Similitude ; promising. 120 Liking. Condition of the body. Likeness. Specionsness ; appearance. Likes me. Pleases me. Lily livered. White livered ; cowardly. Limander. An illiterate artist's blunder for Leander, who swam across the Hellespont to visit Helen of Sestos. Limbeck. The vessel which receives the vapor or steam of distilled liquors. Limbo patrum. A place of temporary confinement in purga- tory, for the especial benefit of the clergy of the Bomish Church, until their release on the day of judgment. Lime. Cement ; also, one kind of lemon ; likewise, a sub- stance used to catch birds with, for which purpose branches are smeared with it. Limed. Caught with bird-lime. Limited. Appointed. Limits. Estimates. Line. To strengthen. Lined, or Limn'd. Delineated. Linstock, or Lint-stock. Before portfires or gunlocks were invented, twisted cotton rope attached to a stick formed the match used for igniting the gunpowder priming of a cannon. Lithe. Pliant ; flexible ; yielding. Lither. Soft ; pleasant. List. To wish ; want ; listen. Lists. Boundaries ; shares ; enclosures for a tournament. Also, chooses — "turns which way he lists." Literal. Plain spoken. Little. Miniature. Liver. Once supposed to be the test of love. Livery. Property. Still used to describe the possession of an office or benefice by a minister of the Church of England. Living. Ocular demonstration of a fact ; something tangible. " Give me a living reason." {Othello.) Livelihood. Evidence in one's looks of a happy state. Lizards' stings. A mistake ; lizards do not sting. Loach. A small prolific fish. Loam. Mortar ; cement ; clay. 127 Lob. A lout; a lubber; likewise, a mischievous clown as Puck is called by one of the fairies. {Midsummer- Nig Ms Dream.) Lock. A small curl of hair fastened with a ribbon and worn on the forehead. It was called a love-lock. Lockkam. A coarse cloth. Locks. Wooden obstacles or weights attached to the hoofs of horses or cattle to prevent their straying from the pasture. Locusts Beans; the vegetable which, with wild honey, con- stituted the food of St. John the Baptist. There is a cluster of locust trees still extant in the locality of the Saint's early abode in Palestine. A convent exists near the spot, and beneath the altar is a star or slab of marble inscribed : " Hie precursor Domine Christi natus est." " Here the herald of the Lord Christ was born." ' Persons of the Baptist denomination frequently make pilgrimages to the locality. Lode star. The leading or guiding planet — that is, the Pole star. Lodge. Sometimes used in the sense of lay or lie ; ad., pros- trate ; s., a lonely abode in a warren. Loffe. To laugh. Loggatts. A kind of dice ; castors ; dumps to gamble with. They were originally clipped from logs of wood — whence the word. Long. Along. u Long of you ;" caused by you ; it is your fault. Long engrafted. Confirmed by long habit. Longing. Belonging to. Longly. Longingly. Long purples Flowers. Loon or Loun. Abbreviation of " clown." Loofed. To luff ; brought close to the wind ; a sea term. Looped. Pierced with apertures ; applicable to the walls of fortresses whence musketry fire can be delivered. Luffd, luffed. Sea phrase, " to windward." Loose, v. To let go ; " loose the forfeiture set on ;" sug- gest ; "loose my daughter." {Merchant of Venice.) 128 Loose shot. Random shooters, (boys ;) n., a departure. Lop. The branch of a tree. Lordling. A little lord. Lots. Prizes. Lottery. " Dropping by lottery," (Julius Coesar;) proscrib- ing individuals by decimation, i.