ichard March, ichard, unger mate NORTH. He did; myself did hear it. Hor. Nay, then I cannot blame his cousin king, To show the line, and the predicament, Even with the bloody payment of your deaths. mences, was little more than ten years old. The Prince of Wales 6 this CANKER, Bolingbroke?] The canker-rose is the dogrose, the flower of the Cynosbaton. So, in Much Ado About Nothing: "I had rather be a canker in a hedge, than a rose in his grace." STEEvens. 7-disdain'd-] For disdainful. JOHNSON. WOR. Peace, cousin, say no more: And now I will unclasp a secret book, And to your quick-conceiving discontents I'll read you matter deep and dangerous; As full of peril, and advent'rous spirit, As to o'er-walk a current, roaring loud, On the unsteadfast footing of a spear. Hor. If he fall in, good night!-or sink or Send danger from the east unto the west, NORTH. Imagination of some great exploit Hor. By heaven, methinks, it were an easy leap, To pluck bright honour from the pale-fac'd moon *; 2 8 On the unsteadfast footing of a spear.] That is, of a spear laid across. WARBURTON. 9 -sink or swim:] This is a very ancient proverbial expression. So, in The Knight's Tale of Chaucer, Mr. Tyrwhitt's edit. v. 2399: "Ne recceth never, whether I sink or flete." Again, in The Longer Thou Livest the More Fool Thou Art, 1570: "He careth not who doth sink or swimme.” STEEVENS. 1 - the blood more stirs, will re To rouse a lion, than to start a hare.] This passage mind the classical reader of young Ascanius's heroic feelings in the fourth Eneid: 2 pecora inter inertia votis Optat aprum, aut fulvum descendere monte leonem. By heaven, methinks, it were an easy leap, STEEVENS. To pluck bright honour from the pale-fac'd moon ;] Though I am very far from condemning this speech with Gildon and Theobald, as absolute madness, yet I cannot find in it that profundity of reflection, and beauty of allegory, which Dr. Warburton endeavoured to display. This sally of Hotspur, may be, I think, soberly and rationally vindicated as the violent eruption of a mind inflated with ambition, and fired with resentment; as the boasted clamour of a man able to do much, and eager to do more; as the Or dive into the bottom of the deep, Where fathom-line could never touch the ground3, So he, that doth redeem her thence, might wear, But out upon this half-fac'd fellowship * ! hasty motion of turbulent desire; as the dark expression of indetermined thoughts. The passage from Euripides is surely not allegorical, yet it is produced, and properly, as parallel. JOHNSON. Euripides has put the very same sentiment into the mouth of Eteocles: "I will not, madam, disguise my thoughts; I would scale heaven, I would descend to the very entrails of the earth, if so be that by that price I could obtain a kingdom." WARBURTON. This is probably a passage from some bombast play, and afterwards used as a common burlesque phrase for attempting impossibilities. At least, that it was the last, might be concluded from its use in Cartwright's poem On Mr. Stokes his Book on the Art of Vaulting, edit. 1651, p. 212: "Then go thy ways, brave Will, for one; By Jove 'tis thou must leap, or none, "To pull bright honour from the moon." Unless Cartwright intended to ridicule this passage in Shakspeare, which I partly suspect. Stokes's book, a noble object for the wits, was printed at London, 1641. T. WARton. A passage somewhat resembling this, occurs in Archbishop Parker's Address to the Reader, prefixed to his Tract entitled A Brief Examination for the Tyme, &c.-" But trueth is to hye set, for you to pluck her out of heaven, to manifestlye knowen to be by your papers obscured, and surely stablished, to drowne her in the myrie lakes of your sophisticall writinges." In The Knight of the Burning Pestle, Beaumont and Fletcher have put the foregoing rant of Hotspur, into the mouth of Ralph the apprentice, who, like Bottom, appears to have been fond of acting parts to tear a cat in. I suppose a ridicule on Shakspeare was designed. STEEVENS. 3 Where fathom-line could never touch the ground,] The Tempest: "I'll seek him deeper than e'er plummet sounded." So, in STEEVENS. 4 But out upon this HALF-FAC'D FELLOWSHIP!] A coat is said to be faced, when part of it, as the sleeves or bosom, is covered with something finer or more splendid than the main substance. The mantua-makers still use the word. "Half-fac'd fellowship" WOR. He apprehends a world of figures here3, But not the form of what he should attend.Good cousin, give me audience for a while. Hor. I cry you mercy. WOR. That are your prisoners, Those same noble Scots, Hor. is then partnership but half-adorned, partnership which yet wants half the show of dignities and honours.' JOHNSON. So, in The Portraiture of Hypocrisie, &c. bl. 1. 1589: “A gentleman should have a gowne for the night, two for the daie, &c. one all furred, another half-faced." Mr. M. Mason, however, observes, that the allusion may be to the half-faces on medals, where two persons are represented. "The coins of Philip and Mary (says he) rendered this image sufficiently familiar to Shakspeare." STEEVENS. I doubt whether the allusion was to dress. Half-fac'd seems to have meant paltry. The expression, which appears to have been a contemptuous one, I believe, had its rise from the meaner denominations of coin, on which, formerly, only a profile of the reigning prince was exhibited; whereas on the more valuable pieces a full face was represented. So, in King John: "With that half-face would he have all my land, "A half-fac'd groat, five hundred pound a year!" But then, it will be said, "what becomes of fellowship? Where is the fellowship in a single face in profile? The allusion must be to the coins of Philip and Mary, where two faces were in part exhibited."-This squaring of our author's comparisons, and making them correspond precisely on every side, is in my apprehension the sourse of endless mistakes. Fellowship relates to Hotspur's "corrival" and himself, and I think to nothing more. I find the epithet here applied to it, in Nashe's Apologie of Pierce Pennilesse, 1593: " with all other ends of your half-faced English." Again, in Histriomastix, 1610: "Whilst I behold yon half-fac'd minion-." MALONE. 5- a world of FIGURES here,] Figure is here used equivocally. As it is applied to Hotspur's speech it is a rhetorical mode; as opposed to form, it means appearance or shape. JOHNSON. Figures mean shapes created by Hotspur's imagination; but not the form of what he should attend, viz. of what his uncle had to propose. EDWARDS. སྒྲ ཁས ACTI here, Scots, all; h vet daie De to ted. age ms ve er e Le WOR. You start away, And lend no ear unto my purposes.- Hor. Nay, I will; that's flat: I'll have a starling shall be taught to speak WOR. Hear you, cousin, a word. Hor. All studies here I solemnly defy", He said, he would not ransom Mortimer; But I will find him when he lies asleep, And in his ear I'll holla-Mortimer!] So Marlowe, in his 7 66 and if he will not ransome him, "I'll thunder such a peale into his eares, "As never subject did unto his king." MALONE. I solemnly DEFY,] One of the ancient senses of the verb, to defy, was to refuse. So, in Romeo and Juliet: 66 'I do defy thy commiseration." STEEVENS. And that same SWORD-AND-BUCKLER prince of Wales,] A royster or turbulent fellow, that fought in taverns, or raised disorders in the streets, was called a Swash-buckler. In this sense sword-and-buckler is here used. JOHNSON. Stowe will keep us to the precise meaning of the epithet here given to the prince." This field, commonly called West-Smithfield, was for many years called Ruffians Hall, by reason it was the usual place of frayes and common fighting, during the time that sword and bucklers were in use. When every serving-man, from the base to the best, carried a buckler at his back, which hung by the hilt or pomel of his sword." HENLEY. I have now before me (to confirm the justice of this remark) a poem entitled "Sword and Buckler, or Serving Man's Defence." By William Bas, 1602. STEEVENS. |