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King John & Henry VIII Page 40


  171 from the right distant from the correct way, i.e. legitimacy

  172 window with vaginal connotations

  172 hatch lower part of a door (with vaginal connotations)

  173 stir plays on the senses of “get an erection/engage in sex”

  173 walk plays on the sexual sense of “be erect”

  174 have (sexual) possession

  174 catch seize, get hold of

  175 Near … off i.e. to the target (in archery/sexually)

  175 shot plays on the sense of “ejaculated”

  179 speed travel hastily

  180 need necessary

  181 adieu good-bye

  183 foot degree (may pun on French foutre, i.e. “fuck”)

  184 many a many i.e. many (emphatic)

  185 Joan typical name for a country or lower-class woman

  186 den evening (from “God give you good even”)

  186 God-a-mercy God have mercy on you

  189 ’Tis i.e. remembering men’s names

  189 respective attentive/respectful

  190 conversion i.e. newly titled man

  191 toothpick ornate toothpicks were fashionable and seen as a foreign sophistication

  191 worship’s mess company of people eating together (now honored by his title)

  192 stomach appetite

  192 sufficed satisfied

  193 catechize question

  194 picked foppish/having used the toothpick/specially chosen

  194 of countries i.e. well-traveled

  197 Absey book book of ABC

  201 would wants, asks

  202 Saving except

  202 dialogue of compliment polite/affected conversation

  205 supper i.e. supper-time

  205 so thus

  207 mounting (socially) ascending/aspiring

  208 bastard … time not a true son of the current age

  209 smack show the characteristics (literally, taste); Folio spelling “smoake” was alternative form of same word, which could also mean “observe, suspect”

  209 observation observance of polite, fashionable practices

  210 so am I i.e. a literal bastard

  211 habit dress

  211 device outward show/ingenuity/heraldic design

  212 accoutrement formal trappings

  213 motion desire, impulse

  214 sweet poison i.e. flattery

  214 tooth appetite, sweet tooth

  215 practise plot

  216 to … learn i.e. learn how to spot other people’s deception by studying it myself

  217 strew be scattered

  217 rising i.e. ascent to greatness

  218 riding-robes horse-riding clothes

  219 woman-post female messenger

  220 blow a horn i.e. to announce her arrival (plays on the fact that her husband has recently been shown to be a cuckold; men with unfaithful wives were popularly imagined to wear horns on their forehead)

  223 slave wretch, villain

  224 holds in chase hunts

  224 up and down in every respect/everywhere

  226 Colbrand the Giant part of an invading Danish army defeated by Guy of Warwick, the eponymous hero of a medieval romance story

  228 unreverend irreverent, disrespectful

  231 give us leave leave us

  233 Philip Sparrow the Bastard rejects his former name (since he has been renamed “Sir Richard Plantagenet”) as a common name for sparrows (as it resembles their call)

  234 toys trifling matters

  234 abroad about, going on

  234 anon soon

  236 eat i.e. eaten (pronounced “et”)

  236 eat … fast “He may his part on Good Friday eat and fast never the worse for ought he shall get” was proverbial

  236 in of

  238 do perform, achieve/make, produce/copulate

  238 marry by the Virgin Mary

  238 confess admit/agree

  239 Could get i.e. were it possible he could conceive

  240 handiwork i.e. his half-brother, Robert Falconbridge

  241 beholding beholden, indebted

  242 holp helped

  244 That you who

  245 untoward unmannerly, improper

  245 knave scoundrel; the Bastard puns on the meaning “servant”

  246 Basilisco a character in a contemporary play who insisted on his knighthood being acknowledged

  247 dubbed knighted, by having a sword placed on the shoulder

  250 Legitimation legitimacy

  252 proper fine/respectable

  254 deny renounce

  256 suit urging, courtship

  258 Heaven may heaven

  258 charge account/responsibility

  259 issue offspring

  259 dear cherished/grievous/costly

  260 defence resistance

  261 get be conceived

  263 privilege immunity

  264 folly foolishness/lust

  265 dispose disposal, command

  266 Subjected obedient/as his royal subject

  268 aweless fearless

  268 lion … hand as punishment for killing the Duke of Austria’s son, Richard I was imprisoned with a lion, whose heart he tore out by putting his hand down its throat

  270 perforce forcibly

  273 Who whoever

  275 kin (new) relations

  277 said him nay refused him

  278 was i.e. a sin

  2.1 Location: France

  2.1 before Angiers in front of the gates of Angiers, on the Loire river

  2.1 Dauphin title for heir to the French throne

  2.1 Austria historically Leopold V; apparently wearing a lion’s skin, supposedly taken from Richard I

  2 that … blood i.e. your predecessor

  4 holy … Palestine the Crusades

  5 By i.e. at the hand of

  6 posterity descendants

  7 importance request

  8 spread display

  8 colours battle flags

  9 rebuke repress

  10 unnatural i.e. behaving in a manner that contradicts natural kinship

  13 offspring descendants

  14 Shadowing sheltering

  15 powerless i.e. without a military force behind it

  16 unstainèd pure, unblemished

  19 zealous earnest

  20 seal … indenture wax seal on a legal contract

  23 pale either adjectival (colorless) or a noun (boundary, enclosure)

  23 pale … shore i.e. the chalk cliffs of England’s southeastern coast (hence England)

  24 spurns kicks, rejects

  25 coops encloses, protects

  26 main sea

  27 bulwark fortification

  27 still always

  28 confident from self-assured against

  28 purposes plans, i.e. threats of invasion

  31 follow arms i.e. take part in military action

  34 more requital to greater recompense for

  37 bent directed

  38 brows i.e. walls/battlements

  39 discipline military strategy

  40 cull select

  40 plots positions, sites

  40 advantages i.e. military advantage in attack

  43 But we will if necessary to

  43 subject to ruled by/answerable to

  44 Stay wait

  44 embassy message

  45 unadvised rashly, without full thought or information

  49 indirectly wrongfully

  50 lo look

  52 England the King of England

  52 gentle noble

  53 coldly calmly

  55 against in preparation for

  56 impatient of angered by

  58 leisure convenience

  58 stayed waited for

  59 legions forces

  60 expedient rapid

  62 Mother-Queen Queen-Mother, i.e. Elinor

  63 Ate Greek goddess of discord and revenge

  64 niece female relati
ve; actually Elinor’s granddaughter and John’s niece

  64 Blanche of Spain daughter of John’s sister Eleanor and Alfonso VIII, King of Castile

  65 king’s deceased dead king (Richard I)

  66 unsettled humours i.e. unruly persons, malcontents; humours four chief bodily fluids (blood, phlegm, choler, black choler) governing mental qualities and disposition

  67 inconsiderate reckless

  67 voluntaries volunteers

  68 ladies’ faces i.e. beardless and young

  68 spleens tempers, impulses

  69 sold … backs i.e. they have spent everything on armor and military equipment

  71 make … of risk, venture

  72 braver more splendid, finer

  72 choice selection

  73 bottoms keels, i.e. ships

  73 waft wafted, i.e. conveyed (suggesting a quick easy journey)

  75 scathe damage

  76 churlish rough, harsh

  77 circumstance details

  78 parley negotiate

  79 expedition warlike enterprise/haste

  82 occasion (needful) circumstances

  83 others i.e. troops

  85 lineal hereditary

  85 own i.e. territories/role of ruler

  88 beats drives, forces

  89 if that if

  91 England’s i.e. Arthur’s

  93 toil i.e. supporting Arthur’s cause

  93 work duty, undertaking

  95 underwrought undermined, sought to overthrow

  95 his its

  96 sequence of posterity lawful succession

  97 Outfacèd defied/intimidated

  97 infant state young majesty, i.e. Arthur

  99 Geoffrey’s i.e. Arthur’s father’s

  101 abstract essence, summary

  103 brief summary

  109 owe own

  110 commission warrant

  111 articles points/charges

  112 supernal judge i.e. God supernal celestial

  116 impeach challenge, accuse

  118 Alack exclamation of dissatisfaction, regret

  119 Excuse … down preventing (your) usurpation of authority is a good enough excuse

  122 Out expression of irritation and scorn

  123 check control, discipline

  126 Liker in feature more similar in physical appearance

  127 in manners (who are) in behavior/character

  128 dam mother (devil and parent were proverbially similar)

  130 His … mother Constance insults Elinor by suggesting that it is likelier that Geoffrey was a bastard than that Arthur might be one

  131 an if if

  132 blots slanders

  133 grandam grandmother

  133 blot defile/erase

  135 crier announcing officer in a law court/town crier (a mocking reference to Austria)

  137 play the devil i.e. make trouble

  138 An a if he

  138 catch seize, get hold of

  138 hide i.e. lion’s skin

  139 hare … beard “even hares may pull dead lions by the beard” (proverbial)

  141 smoke subject to smoke/disinfect/beat

  141 an if

  142 look to’t beware

  143 become earn/befit

  145 sightly appropriately

  146 Alcides Hercules (Greek hero, one of whose twelve labors involved killing a lion, whose skin he then wore); some editors emend “shoes” to “shows,” i.e. distinctive clothing

  148 lay on that i.e. inflict blows

  149 cracker boaster (playing on the sense of “supposed breaker of shoulders”)

  149 deafs deafens

  151 straight straight away

  153 very sum final summary, absolute essence

  158 Bretagne Brittany

  163 it its

  165 fig fruit/something valueless/rude gesture

  169 coil turmoil, fuss

  170 shames dishonors, embarrasses

  173 pearls i.e. tears

  174 in … fee as a bribe for divine support

  175 beads teardrops (plays on the sense of “prayer beads on a rosary”)

  177 monstrous unnatural

  180 dominations dominions

  180 royalties royal rights

  181 eldest son’s son eldest grandson

  182 Infortunate unfortunate

  183 visited punished

  184 canon … law scriptural rule (that the sins of the parents will be visited upon their children)

  185 but only

  186 Removèd distant

  187 Bedlam i.e. madwoman

  190 her sin implies John, whom Constance suggests was conceived adulterously (in sin)

  191 removèd issue relative at one remove, i.e. Arthur

  191 for because of

  192 his injury harm done to Arthur

  193 beadle parish officer entitled to punish minor offences, i.e. punisher

  195 for because of/instead of

  196 unadvisèd rash, thoughtless

  197 title legal claim

  199 will willfulness, wish

  199 cankered corrupt

  200 temperate calm

  201 beseems befits

  201 presence royal company

  201 cry aim shout encouragement (archery term)

  202 ill-tunèd harsh-sounding

  202 repetitions repeated accusations

  203 trumpet trumpeter

  205 admit grant, recognize

  206 warned summoned

  207 France, for England i.e. the French king on behalf of Arthur (who should be King of England)

  211 gentle peaceful/noble

  211 parle negotiation

  213 advancèd raised, displayed

  214 prospect view

  215 endamagement damage, detriment

  216 bowels entrails

  222 stones i.e. city walls

  223 waist belt

  224 ordinance artillery

  225 lime mortar

  226 dishabited dislodged

  227 bloody power violent, fierce troops

  229 much expedient very hasty

  230 countercheck rebuke/check to oppose (the course of something)

  232 amazed stunned/overwhelmed

  232 vouchsafe permit

  233 bullets cannonballs

  235 folded … smoke i.e. concealed in deceitful rhetoric

  236 faithless error untrustworthy lie

  237 accordingly in the same manner/as it deserves

  238 laboured exhausted with hard work

  239 Forwearied worn out

  240 harbourage shelter

  241 said finished speaking

  242 Lo see

  243 right i.e. just claim

  246 enjoys possesses

  247 For on behalf of

  247 downtrodden equity oppressed right

  247 tread picks up on downtrodden

  248 greens grassy areas

  250 constraint compulsion

  254 owes owns

  256 Save except

  256 aspect appearance

  256 offence hostility, harm

  256 sealed up i.e. prevented

  257 spent expended, fired

  259 unvexed untroubled/unimpeded

  259 retire retreat

  260 unhacked unused/undamaged (from battle)

  261 lusty vigorous

  264 fondly foolishly

  264 pass pass up, disregard

  265 roundure roundness, circumference

  266 messengers of war i.e. cannonballs

  267 Though even if

  267 discipline skill in warfare

  268 rude rough

  270 In … which on behalf of him (Arthur) for whom

  276 proves proves to be

  282 else others, suchlike

  284 bloods hot-blooded fellows/noble men

  286 in his face against him

  287 compound agree

  288 for on behalf of

  288 hold withhold

  290 e
verlasting residence i.e. the grave, death

  291 fleet pass, fly off

  292 dreadful terrifying, daunting

  292 trial contest, putting to the proof

  293 chevaliers knights

  294 Saint George patron saint of England who famously slew a dragon

  294 swinged beat, thrashed

  295 Sits … door i.e. as a tavern sign

  295 hostess tavern landlady

  296 fence fencing skill

  297 lioness i.e. Austria’s wife; also means “whore”

  298 set … hide i.e. give Austria the cuckold’s horns by sleeping with his wife

  299 monster because a combination of lion and ox

  303 appointment order, arrangement

  304 advantage superior military position/opportunity

  306 God … right! a battle cry

  306.1 excursions fighting (across the stage)

  306.2 Trumpets trumpeters

  309 by … France with the help of the French king

  312 grovelling prostrate, face down

  316 displayed drawn up (if referring to the troops)/ unfurled (if referring to the banners)

  321 Commander victor

  321 malicious violent, hostile

  322 hence from here

  323 gilt coated/glittering

  324 crest i.e. helmet

  325 staff spear/lance

  326 colours battle flags

  328 like … huntsmen traditionally huntsmen smeared their hands with blood of the kill

  333 onset and retire attack and retreat

  335 censured judged

  338 alike equally

  338 like approve

  343 passage progress, course

  344 native natural, habitual

  344 o’erswell flood (John threatens French territory)

  347 progress journey (may play on the sense of “official royal tour”)

  351 sways rules

  351 climate part of the sky

  352 just-borne justly carried

  353 put thee down defeat you

  354 royal number i.e. a king’s name

  355 tells of records/counts

  357 towers soars, mounts (falconry term)

  359 chaps jaws

  361 mousing tearing at (like a cat or an owl with its prey)

  362 undetermined differences unresolved disagreements

  363 fronts faces

  364 havoc a call for general slaughter

  365 potents potentates, rulers

  366 confusion overthrow, destruction

  366 part side

  367 peace i.e. victory

  368 yet admit now recognize

  371 hold up support

  372 that … here i.e. John has no need for a spokesperson, representing himself as rightful king

  374 presence own existence/majesty

  378 Kings of i.e. ruled by

  379 some certain i.e. one or the other/the particular rightful

  379 purged and deposed refers to the fears

  380 scroyles scoundrels

  380 flout mock, insult

  383 industrious ingenious/painstaking/hard-working