Richard II

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Richard II Page 21

by William Shakespeare


  135 lord of Lancaster i.e. John of Gaunt

  138 trespass sin

  140 exactly in full detail/specifically

  142 appealed with which I am charged

  144 recreant cowardly (if an adjective)/coward (if a noun)

  145 Which which accusation

  146 interchangeably in exchange, reciprocally

  147 overweening arrogant

  149 Even in i.e. by shedding chambered enclosed

  150 In haste whereof to hasten which

  153 purge cure medically (by bloodletting) choler anger (literally yellow bile, the hot and dry “humor,” one of four fluids in ancient and medieval physiology, believed to govern physical and mental qualities) letting shedding; refers specifically to medical practice of phlebotomy (opening a vein so as to let blood flow)

  156 conclude come to terms

  157 doctors learned men, astrologers

  160 become suit, befit

  164 boot point, advantage (in refusing)

  165 dread revered

  167 fair name honorable reputation

  170 impeached accused legally baffled disgraced publicly

  172 balm ointment his … breathed the heart-blood of he who uttered

  175 Lions make leopards the lion symbolized the king and featured on the royal coat of arms; Mowbray’s coat of arms bore a lion leopard, i.e. walking and showing the full face

  176 spots leopard spots/stains of dishonor Take take responsibility for/take over

  179 away gone

  180 but gilded merely covered with gold, superficially fair loam earth, clay

  181 ten-times-barred-up i.e. extremely secure chest plays on the sense of “torso”

  183 in one together, inseparably

  185 try put to the test

  189 crest-fall’n humbled/abashed

  190 impeach my height discredit my high rank, stoop

  191 out-dared cowed/terrified dastard coward

  193 parle truce (literally trumpet call instigating negotiation)

  194 motive instrument, i.e. tongue recanting renouncing a belief/making a public confession of error

  195 his its (the tongue’s)

  196 harbour dwell/shelter

  197 sue beg

  200 Saint Lambert’s day September 17

  202 swelling growing/inflated with pride settled fixed, unchanging

  203 atone set at one, reconcile

  204 design designate, identify chivalry valor or prowess in war

  206 home alarms domestic calls to arms

  1 part … blood i.e. my kinship to Gloucester (who was John of Gaunt’s brother)

  2 solicit urge exclaims outcries, exclamations

  3 stir take action

  4 those hands i.e. Richard’s (whom Gaunt holds responsible for Gloucester’s death)

  11 Edward Edward III

  15 Destinies the Fates in classical mythology who cut the thread of life with their shears

  19 liquor liquid

  20 faded faded, withered

  21 envy’s malice’s

  23 metal substance (puns on “mettle,” i.e. disposition) self-mould selfsame mold/mold from which the self is made

  25 consent assent, acquiesce

  28 model copy, image

  30 suff’ring allowing

  31 naked i.e. defenseless

  33 mean lowly, humble

  36 venge avenge

  37 Heaven’s … deputy i.e. Richard who, as king, was held to be God’s earthly representative

  38 anointed … sight i.e. marked with holy oil at Westminster Abbey, the part of the coronation ceremony that signified the sacred nature of the king

  42 complaint myself lodge a formal complaint

  43 champion defender

  46 cousin kinsman fell cruel, fierce

  49 career charge of the horse in combat

  51 courser swift powerful horse ridden in battle

  52 lists area of combat (literally, the barriers enclosing it)

  53 caitiff cowardly, villainous recreant faith-breaker

  54 thy sometimes formerly your

  58 boundeth rebounds

  62 brother i.e. brother-in-law

  63 Lo look

  66 Plashy the Duke of Gloucester’s country estate in Essex

  69 offices servants’ quarters

  2 at all points completely, in every respect

  3 sprightfully full of high spirits

  4 Stays awaits appellant accuser, challenger

  5 champions contenders Flourish trumpet fanfare accompanying a person in authority When … set a Quarto direction, omitted from Folio, indicating that the king, as umpire, should be set upon a raised throne

  7 demand ask

  9 orderly duly, properly

  13 quarrel complaint

  18 defend forbid

  20 succeeding subsequent/who will inherit the throne issue children Tucket personal trumpet call

  28 plated armored habiliments clothing, attire

  30 Depose him take his sworn deposition

  31 wherefore why

  43 daring-hardy recklessly bold touch i.e. interfere in

  45 fair lawful, proper

  51 several respective/various

  55 as insofar as, to the extent to which

  56 royal fight because held in the king’s presence

  57 my blood Richard’s reference is ambiguous; Bullingbrook was his cousin but all subjects were the king’s and part of the body politic

  59 profane wrongfully let fall

  66 lusty vigorous, robust cheerly cheerfully

  67 regreet salute, welcome

  68 daintiest most delicious

  70 regenerate reborn, renewed

  71 twofold i.e. father’s and son’s

  73 proof impenetrability

  75 waxen i.e. soft, vulnerable

  76 furbish polish

  77 ’haviour behavior, actions

  81 amazing stupefying/terrifying casque helmet

  82 pernicious ruinous

  84 Saint George patron saint of England

  90 enfranchisement freedom

  95 gentle pleasant, friendly, courteous jocund joyful, cheerful jest amuse oneself/act in a masque

  97 Securely confidently

  98 couchèd lodged/at rest

  99 Order set in order/initiate

  106 recreant cowardly/unfaithful to duty

  108 him i.e. Bullingbrook

  112 approve prove

  114 him i.e. Mowbray

  116 Attending awaiting charge trumpet call signaling the beginning of combat

  118 Stay halt, stop warder staff or baton held by the king to symbolize his authority over the combat

  119 lay by put aside

  122 return inform

  123 list listen to

  124 For that because

  125 dear beloved/costly

  126 for because aspect sight

  128 boist’rous noisy, raucous/violent

  130 shock clash in combat

  136 regreet see again

  137 stranger foreign

  144 sly stealthy determinate put to an end

  145 dateless limit unlimited term dear heartfelt/grievous

  147 life i.e. loss of life

  149 unlooked for unexpected

  150 merit reward maim wound

  151 common ordinary/open

  157 cunning skillfully made/requiring skill to play

  158 open not in its case

  159 touch fingering/skill

  161 portcullised shut in, as if with a portcullis (defensive iron grille, usually of a castle)

  168 boots profits compassionate lamenting piteously

  169 plaining complaining

  171 solemn burdensome/dark/mournful

  175 Our part therein i.e. the duty you owe to me as king

  180 regreet greet (one another) again

  181 louring darkly threatening

  182 advisèd considered, deliberate

  183 complot conspire in


  187 so far as let me say this much

  190 sepulchre tomb

  192 fly flee

  194 clogging encumbering (like a clog, a block of wood attached to the neck or leg to prevent escape)

  199 rue regret, lament

  200 stray take the wrong road/go wrong

  201 Save except

  202 glasses windows

  203 aspect look

  208 wanton abundant, flourishing

  212 vantage advantage

  214 times seasonal cycles

  215 oil-dried empty of oil time-bewasted used up by time

  216 extinct extinguished

  217 taper candle

  218 blindfold death refers to the eyeless skull that symbolized death and/or to the idea of death depriving Gaunt of the power to see

  224 pilgrimage i.e. journey through life

  225 current valid, genuine (as a legitimate coin)

  226 dead i.e. once I am dead

  227 advice counsel, consideration, judgment

  228 party-verdict share in the collective decision (of the king’s advisers)

  229 lour frown, look gloomy

  233 looked when expected that, waited for

  234 make … away banish my own child

  235 leave permission

  239 presence … know I cannot learn of you in person/what the royal court shall not know

  240 paper i.e. letters

  245 few i.e. few words

  246 office function prodigal extravagant

  247 breathe utter dolour sorrow

  248 grief cause for grief (Bullingbrook shifts the sense to “sorrow”) time short while

  252 travel journey/labor

  253 miscall wrongly call

  255 sullen somber, melancholy

  256 Esteem as foil regard as a setting for a jewel

  259 Caucasus region bordering Asia Minor including the Caucasus Mountains, depicted by Ovid as cold and stony

  260 cloy satiate, gorge

  263 fantastic imaginary

  264 apprehension conception, awareness

  266 Fell fierce, cruel rankle cause festering

  267 lanceth pierces (to relieve infection)

  268 bring escort

  270 adieu goodbye

  1 We did observe Richard enters mid-conversation

  2 high proud/of high rank

  4 next nearest

  5 store quantity, abundance

  6 for me on my part

  8 rheum watery discharge, i.e. tears

  9 hollow insincere

  11 for because

  12 craft skill, cunning

  13 counterfeit pretend, fake

  15 Marry by the Virgin Mary

  19 cousin Aumerle’s father is the Duke of York, Richard’s uncle doubt doubtful

  21 friends relatives

  26 reverence respect

  28 underbearing endurance

  29 banish … him take their affection into exile with him

  30 bonnet soft brimless hat oyster-wench girl who sells oysters

  31 brace of draymen pair of cart drivers

  32 supple easily bent

  34 in reversion i.e. after my death (when leased land would revert to its true owner)

  35 our … hope in terms of public expectation and favor, the nearest heir

  37 stand out make a stand, hold out

  38 Expedient manage swift management

  39 leisure delay

  43 largesse generosity

  44 farm lease parts of the land to tenants who might then collect taxes on their own behalf

  46 come short is insufficient

  47 substitutes those appointed to govern during the king’s absence blank charters documents authorizing deputies to collect revenues, or forced loans; blank spaces were left for the names of those required to pay

  49 subscribe them enter their names

  50 them i.e. the sums collected

  51 presently immediately

  57 Ely House the Bishop of Ely’s palace in Holborn, London

  60 lining contents (puns on the sense of “lining of a coat”)

  sick Gaunt is probably carried on stage in a chair

  2 unstaid uncontrolled

  9 listened listened to

  10 gloze flatter, talk smoothly

  11 marked paid attention to

  12 close closing cadence of a piece of music

  13 last at its end/for longest

  16 sad serious, solemn

  18 state kingly splendor

  19 metres verses venom poisonous

  21 proud arrogant/showy/splendid

  22 tardy apish belatedly imitating

  24 vanity trifle

  25 So provided there’s no respect it does not matter

  26 buzzed whispered busily

  27 That so that

  28 will … regard desire rebels against reasoned consideration

  31 new inspired newly filled with divine influence (plays on the sense of “full of newly drawn breath”)

  32 expiring dying/breathing out

  33 riot wasteful, dissolute lifestyle

  35 Small composed of fine drops

  36 betimes early

  38 Light vanity frivolous foolishness cormorant glutton (literally, greedy seabird)

  39 means resources, means of sustenance

  40 sceptred invested with regal authority

  41 earth of majesty land fit for kings Mars Roman god of war

  45 happy breed fortunate race

  47 office function

  50 plot land for cultivation

  51 teeming fertile

  52 by their breed on account of their mighty ancestry

  55 sepulchre cave outside Jerusalem in which Christ was buried stubborn Jewry the residents of Jerusalem who resisted Christianity

  56 world’s … son i.e. Christ

  60 tenement land or property held by a tenant pelting paltry

  61 bound in bordered, surrounded

  62 envious malicious, hostile

  63 Neptune Roman god of the sea bound legally bound

  64 inky … bonds i.e. the corrupt blank charters

  65 wont accustomed

  73 composition state of health

  76 meat food

  77 watched remained awake/kept guard

  83 inherits receives

  84 nicely ingeniously, precisely

  85 to mock in mocking

  86 kill … me i.e. by banishing Gaunt’s son and heir

  93 see thee ill see you imperfectly (as my sight is failing)/see the ill that is in you

  101 compass circumference

  102 verge limit, rim/the twelve-mile radius around the king’s court/measure of land

  103 waste wasteland/wastefulness/damage done to property by a tenant/waist

  104 grandsire i.e. Edward III

  105 his sons Edward’s sons, Richard’s uncles/Richard’s own (as yet unborn) children

  106 forth beyond

  107 Deposing disinheriting, depriving possessed in possession of the crown (sense then shifts to “inhabited by the devil”)

  109 cousin kinsman regent ruler

  111 for … land insofar as your world consists of this land

  114 state … law absolute legal status (as king) is now subject to legal processes (as a result of leasing out land)

  116 Presuming on taking advantage of ague fever and shaking

  117 frozen cold, hostile/chilled by illness

  120 seat throne/status

  122 roundly bluntly/fluently

  123 unreverent disrespectful

  125 For that because

  126 pelican the bird’s offspring were thought to feed on her blood

  127 tapped out drawn as from a barrel caroused drunk heartily/drunk toasts with

  129 fair good, happiness

  133 unkindness unnatural behavior

  139 sullens sulks, gloomy moods

  140 become befit, suit

  143 dear As Harry as dearly as Gaunt holds Harr
y (but Richard interprets “as dearly as Harry holds Richard”)

  151 spent used up, exhausted

  155 pilgrimage i.e. journey through life

  157 supplant get rid of rug-headed shaggy-haired kerns lightly armed foot soldiers

  160 ask some charge require some expenditure

  161 seize take possession (legal term)

  162 plate gold or silver tableware movables portable property

  167 Gaunt’s rebukes the rebukes given by Richard to Gaunt private wrongs wrongs done to individuals

  168 Bullingbrook … marriage Richard prevented the exiled Bullingbrook from marrying a cousin of the French king

  171 bend one wrinkle direct one frown

  178 Accomplished … hours i.e. when he was your age Accomplished equipped

  190 withal with that

  191 seize take legal possession of

  192 royalties rights granted by the king/rights due to one of royal blood

  194 true loyal/legitimate (as heir)

  198 His i.e. time’s customary rights i.e. of inheritance and succession

  199 ensue follow

  204 Call … patents revoke the documents signed by the king granting land or titles

  205 By … livery allowing him to sue, through his lawyers, for the right to his inheritance

  206 homage avowal of allegiance, part of the formal process of receiving one’s inheritance

  207 pluck pull

  209 prick spur

  213 by nearby, present

  215 courses i.e. of action

  216 events consequences

  218 repair come

  219 see attend to Tomorrow next tomorrow/tomorrow morning

  220 trow believe

  230 great swollen with emotion with silence by keeping silent

  231 liberal freely speaking

  234 Tends … to does what you want to say relate to

  239 Bereft forcibly deprived, robbed gelded deprived of wealth/castrated

  246 prosecute perform/pursue

  248 piled most editors emend to “pilled” (stripped bare, plundered)

  250 ancient long-standing

  251 exactions means of enforcing payment

  252 blanks blank charters benevolences forced loans wot know

  253 this i.e. all the money that has been collected

  255 basely … compromise made concessions in a cowardly way

  258 in farm for rent, on lease

  259 broken financially ruined

  267 sore sorely, threateningly

  268 strike draw in the sails/strike blows in opposition securely overconfidently, heedlessly

  271 suffering enduring, permitting

  274 tidings news

  281 Rainold … Exeter in fact, it was the young Earl of Arundel who escaped from Exeter’s custody; it seems likely that a line is missing here and many editors insert a line based on Shakespeare’s source, Holinshed’s Chronicles: “Thomas, son and heir to th’Earl of Arundel”

 

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