As You Like It

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As You Like It Page 23

by William Shakespeare


  68 th’embossèd … evils swellings and sores caused by venereal disease

  70 disgorge vomit

  71 pride sexual desire/arrogance

  72 tax … party censure any particular individual

  74 weary … ebb the very stuff it feeds on is exhausted and used up

  77 cost of princes i.e. excessively costly garments

  78 come in come forward in the law court/intervene

  80 function occupation

  81 bravery fine clothes

  81 not … cost none of my business as I did not pay for it

  82 suits fits/dresses

  83 mettle spirit/substance

  85 do him right speak truly of him

  86 free innocent

  89 Forbear stop

  92 Of … of? Where has this young cockerel sprung from?

  94 rude uncivilized

  96 touched … first hit it with your first suggestion

  98 inland bred civilized

  99 nurture education, good upbringing

  101 answerèd satisfied

  102 reason may pun on “raisin” (grape), possibly part of the fruit at the meal

  103 gentleness nobility/civilized conduct

  109 countenance appearance/expression

  112 melancholy dark, gloomy

  115 knolled rung (to summon people)

  119 enforcement constraint

  126 upon command at will

  127 wanting needs

  133 weak causing weakness

  136 waste consume

  138 unhappy ill-fated

  146 acts actions/divisions of a play

  147 Mewling whimpering, mewing

  153 strange foreign

  153 bearded … pard with a bristling beard like a leopard’s whiskers

  154 Jealous in quick to defend his

  157 capon chicken (technically a castrated cockerel)

  159 saws sayings

  159 modern instances everyday examples

  161 pantaloon in Italian comedy, the foolish elderly man who wore spectacles, pantaloons (type of trousers), and slippers

  163 hose breeches

  164 shank leg

  166 his its

  167 history history play/narrative

  168 mere complete

  169 Sans without

  169 eyes eyesight

  175 fall to eat

  177.1 Song often sung by Amiens, assuming he is among the lords onstage for this scene

  179 unkind cruel/unnatural

  181 keen sharp

  183 rude rough

  189 nigh close

  191 warp wrinkle/become corrugated by turning to ice

  196 faithfully convincingly/truly

  197 effigies likeness

  198 limned portrayed

  204 fortunes adventures

  Act 3 Scene 1

  3.1 Location: the court

  1 him i.e. Orlando

  2 better greater

  2 made made of

  3 argument subject

  4 present being present (i.e. I would vent my wrath on you instead)

  7 turn return

  10 seizure taking legal possession of

  11 quit … mouth acquit yourself by means of your brother’s own testimony

  16 of … nature whose responsibility it is

  17 Make … upon seize

  18 expediently promptly

  18 turn him going send him packing

  Act 3 Scene 2

  3.2 Location: the forest (where all remaining scenes are set)

  2 thrice-crownèd … night the goddess of the moon, hunting, and chastity, known as Luna/Cynthia/Phoebe in the heavens, Diana/Artemis on earth, and Proserpina/Hecate/Lucina in the underworld

  4 Thy huntress i.e. Rosalind

  4 sway rule

  6 character write

  10 unexpressive inexpressible

  16 private lonely

  18 spare frugal

  18 humour temperament

  19 plenty abundance/comforts of life/food

  20 stomach inclination/appetite

  22 wants lacks

  26 art education

  27 complain of lament the lack of/complain about

  28 natural instinctive/foolish/rustic

  32 hope i.e. hope not

  33 ill-roasted … side eggs were roasted in the hot ashes of the fire and required turning for even cooking

  37 manners proper behavior/morals

  39 parlous perilous

  43 but you kiss without kissing

  45 Instance evidence/give an example

  46 still always

  46 fells fleeces

  49 grease sweat

  54 tarred … sheep tar, having antiseptic properties, was applied to injured sheep

  56 civet musky substance used in perfume and obtained from the anal glands of the civet cat

  57 worms-meat i.e. rotten flesh

  57 respect of comparison with

  59 perpend consider

  60 flux flow

  60 Mend improve

  61 rest cease (Touchstone shifts sense to “remain”)

  63 make incision cut, as raw meat is scored and salted for cooking/cut, for the medical purpose of letting blood (and curing folly)/graft on (wisdom), as a plant is cultivated

  63 raw inexperienced/ignorant/uncooked

  64 that what

  64 get earn

  66 content … harm patient in my own afflictions

  68 simple foolish

  69 offer presume/venture

  70 cattle animals/whores

  70 bawd pimp

  70 bell-wether leading male sheep of a flock (with a bell around its neck)

  71 crooked-pated with crooked/curled horns

  72 cuckoldly a cuckold (man with an unfaithful wife) was traditionally said to grow horns

  72 out of beyond the limits of

  77 Ind Indies

  81 lined drawn

  82 black to dark-complexioned, foul compared to

  84 fair beauty/light complexion

  85 together continuously

  86 It … market i.e. the predictable verse resembles either the jogging to market of country women in a cart or the eager lust of a whore to put herself to sale

  86 butter-women butter sellers/lecherous women/whores

  87 rank movement in line/lustful

  90 hart male deer

  90 hind female deer

  92 after kind act according to its nature (proverbial; plays on the sense of “have sex”)

  94 Wintered worn in winter/old

  94 lined plays on notion of sex between dogs, giving bawdy connotations to the next line (i.e. Rosalind will lose her slenderness to pregnancy)

  96 reap perhaps with slang sense of “have sex”

  96 sheaf and bind tie the crop into bundles (perhaps with suggestion of pregnancy)

  97 cart transport the crop in a cart/punish a prostitute by publicly carrying her in or whipping her behind a cart

  98 nut plays on the sense of “vagina”

  100 rose plays on the sense of “vagina”

  101 prick thorn/penis

  102 false gallop canter

  105 fruit plays on sense of “genitals”

  106 graff graft i.e. make one plant grow onto another (plays on the sense of “have sex”)

  107 medlar tree bearing applelike fruits/medlar fruit (resembles the vagina)/pun on “meddler” (prostitute)

  108 rotten infected with venereal disease

  108 right virtue true character

  114 For because

  116 civil sayings civilized reflections

  118 his erring its wandering

  119 span distance from thumb to little finger

  120 Buckles in encompasses

  127 quintessence purest essence/extract

  127 sprite spirit

  128 in little in miniature (i.e. in the form of Rosalind)

  129 Nature charged ordered Natur
e

  131 wide-enlarged (that had been) widely dispersed

  132 presently immediately

  133 Helen’s … heart i.e. Helen of Troy’s beauty but not her deceitful heart; when Paris carried Helen off to Troy war broke out between the Greeks and the Trojans

  134 Cleopatra famous Egyptian queen

  135 Atalanta’s better part presumably her beauty or perhaps athletic skill; Atalanta declared that she would marry only the man who could defeat her in a race, whereas losing suitors would be killed

  136 Lucretia’s modesty raped by Tarquin, Lucretia was so ashamed she committed suicide

  138 synod assembly/conjunction of planets

  140 touches features

  141 would willed

  142 I to that I should

  143 Jupiter, king of the gods who carried off the beautiful youth Ganymede

  146 Back (to Corin and Touchstone) move back

  147 sirrah sir (used to an inferior)

  149 bag and baggage collective property of an army

  149 scrip and scrippage nonce phrase referring to a shepherd’s pouch (scrip) and its contents

  153 feet i.e. metrical feet

  160 seven … wonder from the phrase “a nine days’ wonder” (so Rosalind has been wondering about the verses for quite a while)

  162 Pythagoras Greek philosopher who believed in the transmigration of souls from humans to animals

  162 that when

  163 Irish rat supposedly the Irish could kill rats with rhyming incantations

  164 Trow know

  166 And a chain i.e. yes, it is, and one with a chain

  167 Change you colour? Are you blushing?

  169 friends plays on the sense of “lovers”

  169 friends … encounter inversion of the proverb “friends may meet, but mountains never greet”

  169 encounter plays on the sense of “sexual union”

  173 possible i.e. that you do not know

  174 I … vehemence I earnestly beg you

  176 wonderful incredible

  177 out … whooping beyond what all shouts of astonishment can express

  179 Good my complexion! Oh (have mercy on) my temperament/curiosity!

  180 caparisoned dressed

  181 South … discovery i.e. as lengthy as an exploratory voyage over the South Seas

  182 apace swiftly

  188 belly stomach/womb (playing on drink in its slang sense of “have sex”)

  189 of God’s making i.e. a real man

  193 stay wait for

  197 sad … maid i.e. seriously and truly

  204 Wherein went he? What was he wearing?

  204 makes he is he doing

  208 Gargantua the giant in François Rabelais’ book Gargantua (1534)

  210 particulars details

  210 catechism series of set questions and answers used as a form of instruction by the Church

  214 atomies motes, atoms

  214 resolve the propositions answer the questions

  216 relish flavor

  216 good observance close attention

  218 Jove’s tree oak trees were associated with Jove

  220 Give me audience listen to me

  222 along out

  225 “holla” stop (used to a horse)

  225 curvets leaps about

  226 furnished dressed

  227 heart puns on “hart” (male deer)

  228 burden chorus

  232 bring me out make me forget what I was saying

  232 Soft! Wait a moment!

  235 lief willingly

  237 society company

  243 ill-favouredly poorly

  245 just exactly

  251 pretty clever

  252 acquainted plays on the sense of “sexually familiar”

  252 conned learned by heart

  253 rings which had verses engraved on them (also slang for “vaginas”)

  254 right painted cloth in the manner of a cheap hanging depicting commonplace mythological scenes

  255 questions topics

  257 Atalanta famed for her swiftness

  259 breather i.e. living being

  262 change exchange

  264 troth faith

  268 figure image (Orlando plays on the sense of “number”)

  269 cipher zero

  274 saucy lackey insolent minion

  275 habit appearance

  275 play the knave play a boy/trick him

  282 detect reveal

  286 divers various

  291 hard with an uneasy pace, with difficulty

  292 contract … marriage formal betrothal

  293 se’nnight week (seven nights)

  299 lean unrewarding/thin

  299 wasteful time-wasting/causing one to waste away

  300 tedious troublesome/painful

  304 softly slowly

  306 vacation period during which the law courts are suspended

  307 term period appointed for the sitting of courts of law

  309 skirts outskirts

  312 cony rabbit

  312 kindled born

  314 purchase acquire

  314 removed remote

  316 religious pious/monastic/scrupulous

  317 inland of civilized society

  317 courtship court life/wooing

  319 touched tainted

  320 generally without exception

  326 his its

  328 physic medicine

  329 haunts who hangs around

  332 fancy-monger dealer in love

  334 quotidian daily recurring fever

  337 marks signs, symptoms

  338 cage of rushes i.e. flimsy prison

  341 blue i.e. with dark circles

  342 unquestionable unwilling to be questioned

  344 your … revenue your beard is like a younger brother’s income (i.e. small)

  346 ungartered not tied up

  346 unbanded without a colored hatband

  349 point-device immaculate

  349 accoutrements clothes

  349 as as if

  353 apter more likely

  355 still always

  356 sooth truth

  362 merely entirely

  363 dark … do imprisonment in the dark and whipping were “treatments” for the insane

  365 profess practice, have knowledge in

  370 moonish changeable

  371 fantastical fanciful, impulsive

  372 apish foolish

  374 cattle … colour beasts of this kind

  375 entertain welcome, treat well

  376 forswear deny, reject

  376 that so that

  377 drave drove

  377 living genuine

  379 merely utterly

  381 liver thought to be the seat of the passions

  381 sound healthy

  385 cote cottage

  387 by on

  Act 3 Scene 3

  1 apace quickly

  2 how what

  3 simple feature plain appearance (Audrey may understand “specific part/penis”)

  4 warrant protect

  6 capricious lascivious, fickle (from the Latin caper meaning “goat”; the wordplay is reinforced by goats/Goths having similar pronunciations)

  6 Ovid … Goths Roman poet Ovid, author of The Art of Love, was banished to live among the Goths; he complained that they did not understand his verses

  7 ill-inhabited poorly lodged

  7 Jove … house having been turned away by others, the disguised Jove and his son Mercury were welcomed into the humble dwelling of Philemon and Baucis

  10 seconded backed, supported

  10 forward precocious

  11 great … room large bill for insubstantial accommodation; some critics see a reference to the 1593 tavern murder of playwright Christopher Marlowe, supposedly the result of a dispute about the bill

  14 honest respectable/genuine

  17 f
eigning imaginative/deceitful

  21 honest truthful/chaste

  25 hard-favoured ugly

  27 material meaningful, full of matter/concerned with earthly things

  30 foul loathsome/filthy/ugly

  30 slut woman of slovenly habits/kitchen maid/whore

  31 meat food (plays on the sense of “penis”)

  31 dish plays on the sense of “vagina”

  35 Sir Oliver Martext “Sir” was sometimes used for priests who were not university graduates;

  36 Martext (mar-text) suggests an uneducated priest who could not expound upon the Scriptures

  36 next nearest

  37 couple marry (plays on the sense of “get us to have sex”)

  38 fain willingly

  38 meeting encounter/sexual union

  41 stagger falter

  42 assembly congregation

  42 horn-beasts suggestive of cuckolds

  42 what though what of it

  43 necessary inevitable

  44 knows … goods i.e. is very well off

  47 deer plays on the sense of “dear”

  48 rascal young or inferior deer in a herd/ordinary husband

  49 walled i.e. fortified

  51 defence possibly plays on type of fortification known as “hornwork”

  52 to want be lacking

  55 dispatch us settle (i.e. marry)

  58 on as the

  62 What-ye-call’t probably a joking reluctance to say “Jaques” (i.e. “jakes” meaning “lavatory”)

  63 ’ild yield (i.e. reward)

  63 last most recent (i.e. present)

  64 toy in hand trifle to attend to

  65 covered i.e. put on your (respectfully removed) hat

  67 bow yoke

  67 curb restraining strap attached to the bit

  68 bells attached to the falcon’s leg

  69 bill stroke beak with beak

  69 nibbling having sex/seizing

  73 wainscot wooden paneling

  74 green not dried thoroughly/unseasoned

  75 warp shrink/go wrong

  76 I … but I am inclined to think that

  77 of by

  77 like likely

  78 well properly

  82 bawdry lewdness

  84 “O … thee” lines from a lost Elizabethan ballad, originally paired with a reply; Touchstone rejects the lines of the abandoned woman, in favor of the dismissive answer

  84 brave fine, worthy

  87 Wind wend, go

  90 fantastical capricious, mad

  91 flout mock/jeer

  Act 3 Scene 4

  6 dissembling deceitful

  6 dissembling … Judas i.e. reddish, traditionally the hair color of Judas, the disciple who betrayed Christ with a kiss

  7 his … children refers to the kiss with which Judas betrayed Christ

  10 your this

  11 only i.e. most desirable

  13 holy bread bread blessed and distributed to those who had not taken Communion; after the Reformation, bread provided for the Eucharist

 

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