Cymbeline

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Cymbeline Page 24

by William Shakespeare


  Thanks as always to our indefatigable and eagle-eyed copy editor Tracey Day and to Ray Addicott for overseeing the production process with rigor and calmness.

  Picture research by Michelle Morton. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust for assistance with picture research (special thanks to Helen Hargest) and reproduction fees.

  Images of RSC productions are supplied by the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon. This library, maintained by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, holds the most important collection of Shakespeare material in the UK, including the Royal Shakespeare Company’s official archive. It is open to the public free of charge.

  For more information see www.shakespeare.org.uk.

  1. Ellen Terry (1896) Reproduced by permission of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust.

  2. Directed by Peter Hall (1957) Angus McBean © Royal Shakespeare Company

  3. Directed by Bartlett Sher (2001) Malcolm Davies © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  4. Directed by Adrian Noble (1997) Malcolm Davies © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  5. Directed by William Gaskill (1962) Tom Holte © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  6. Directed by Bill Alexander (1987) Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  7. Directed by David Jones (1979) Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  8. Directed by John Barton (1974) Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  9. Directed by Dominic Cooke (2003) John Haynes © Royal Shakespeare Company

  10. Directed by Emma Rice (2006) Ellie Kurttz © Royal Shakespeare Company

  11. Reconstructed Elizabethan Playhouse © Charcoalblue

  Act 1 Scene 1

  1.1 Location: the British royal court (the play moves between ancient Britain and Rome)

  1 but frowns who does not frown

  1 bloods dispositions, temperaments

  3 Still … king mimic the king’s emotions; seem suggests a lack of sincerity

  6 purposed to intended for, i.e. to marry

  7 late recently

  7 referred … Unto given herself to/chosen

  9 all … heart i.e. Cymbeline is deeply wounded whereas the courtiers’

  9 outward sorrow is false

  13 He … her i.e. Cloten

  15 bent inclination

  19 missed failed to win; also suggests Innogen’s lucky escape

  19 thing contemptuous being, beneath humanity

  22 creature living being, suggesting he is beyond common humanity

  24 his like like him

  24 something … compare anyone chosen for comparison would have some fault to distinguish them

  26 outward physical appearance

  26 stuff substance, quality

  27 Endows … he so enriches/is to be found in any other

  28 speak him far speak highly of him

  29 extend … himself i.e. praise him no further than he deserves

  31 measure true capacity

  32 birth parentage/social status

  33 delve … root properly trace his family history

  34 honour fame, renown; also himself and his forces

  35 Cassibelan Cymbeline’s uncle

  36 by from, under

  36 Tenantius Cymbeline’s father

  38 sur-addition added title

  38 Leonatus means “born of a lion” (Latin)

  42 fond of issue doting on his children

  44 Big of pregnant with

  47 of his bedchamber a personal servant

  48 learnings education

  48 time age/experience

  50 fast as fast

  51 in’s … harvest reached maturity even in his youth

  52 rare unusual

  53 sample example, model

  54 glass mirror

  54 feated them displayed them to themselves

  54 graver more important, influential persons

  55 dotards old fools

  56 her own price the price she paid/her personal merit

  57 Proclaims shows, proves

  57 how to what extent/in what manner

  57 his … read the very fact that she chose Posthumus demonstrates his worth

  60 even out of based only on

  65 I’th’swathing clothes in the swaddling (i.e. baby) clothes

  70 conveyed taken away, stolen

  71 slackly negligently, loosely

  73 Howsoe’er ’tis strange strange as it may seem

  77 forbear cease/give way

  77 Posthumus meaning “after death” (Latin); so named from the deaths of his parents before and at his birth, with the name “Leonatus” living on in him

  77 Innogen Folio’s “Imogen” is probably a misprint or scribal error; she is called Innogen in Shakespeare’s source material, which suggests “innocence”

  80 After the slander as in the conventional unjust image

  83 restraint loss of liberty, perhaps an actual prison cell

  84 win win over, persuade

  85 marry by the Virgin Mary, i.e. indeed

  87 leaned unto went along with, obeyed

  87 with … you with what resignation, compliance you must decide

  89 Please if it please

  90 from hence leave here

  91 peril danger (in staying since Posthumus is banished)

  92 fetch a turn take a walk

  92 pitying because I pity

  93 pangs … affections pains caused by forbidden love

  94 charged ordered

  95 dissembling false, feigned, deceitful

  98 reserved … duty having always dutifully obeyed him as a daughter

  100 hourly shot continual glare; the eye was thought to emit beams at objects in order to see them

  106 more … man i.e. join you in crying; not considered appropriate for a man

  108 plight troth take marriage vows; the phrase was more often associated with engagement

  111 thither there, to that place

  113 gall an excrescence produced by insects on oak trees used to make ink/bile (a bitter secretion of the liver) hence bitterness of spirit, rancor

  118 buy interpret, believe (wrongly)

  121 term period of time

  122 loathness reluctance, unwillingness

  125 petty inadequate

  131 cere wrap in a burial cloth

  133 sense the ability to feel/control one’s actions

  134 As … you just as you gave up more than me for our marriage, you do so again in our exchange of gifts

  135 trifles small, insignificant tokens

  138 fairest prisoner i.e. Innogen’s arm

  140 see meet, see each other

  141 Alack expression of sorrow, regret

  142 basest most worthless (morally and socially)

  142 avoid hence get away

  143 fraught burden/trouble

  147 good remainders remaining courtiers/virtuous courtiers

  149 pinch pain, torment

  152 repair restore, renew, prolong

  156 senseless of insensible to

  156 touch more rare greater pain (caused by Posthumus’ departure)

  159 past grace Cymbeline means beyond filial duty, but Innogen shifts the sense to “beyond heavenly grace/salvation”

  162 puttock kite, seen as an inferior bird to the eagle/greedy scavenger

  170 overbuys … pays i.e. the price he has paid is almost twice my worth

  174 neatherd cowherd

  178 after in accordance with

  180 Beseech I beg

  183 best advice calm meditation on the matter

  184 languish … folly grow weak by loss of a

  184 drop of blood a day for the rest of her life until she is old and dies

  187 Fie … way unclear as to whether this is said to Innogen or the departing Cymbeline

  189 drew i.e. his sword

 
194 no … anger wasn’t angry enough to fight seriously

  197 takes his part does his duty/takes the king’s side

  199 Afric i.e. a desert or remote place where they could fight without intervention

  201 goer-back one who retreats, backs off

  202 suffer allow

  203 haven harbor

  207 lay wager

  Act 1 Scene 2

  1 shift a shirt change your shirt

  1 violence … sacrifice i.e. your fight (with Posthumus) has made you smell (through sweat or fear) like a sacrificial animal

  2 where … vent the air you give out (vent) is more wholesome than the air that comes in to replace it (ironic flattery)

  3 abroad outside (you)

  5 then to then I would

  7 not … as nothing more than

  8 passable carcass would pass for a dead body/a body that can be stabbed (passed) through

  10 His … town Cloten’s sword (steel) rather went around the backstreets like a debtor trying to avoid a creditor

  12 stand me stand his ground/stand up to me

  17 As … oceans i.e. none at all

  17 Puppies! Conceited young fools!

  19 till … ground i.e until you were fallen prostrate on the ground

  22 election choice, with a pun on salvation; in Calvinist doctrine, the predestined elect were to be saved

  25 She’s … sign she has a good physical appearance

  26 reflection evidence, indication; the Second Lord shifts the sense to “the literal reflection of light” (i.e. her radiance which fools are unable to absorb and would dazzle her)

  26 wit intelligence, judgment (perhaps with sexual connotation of “genitals”)

  29 would there had I wish there had

  32 ass i.e. Cloten

  36 Well very well

  Act 1 Scene 3

  1 grew’st unto took root like a plant (by remaining there so long)

  2 And … sail scrutinized every approaching ship

  4 offered mercy perhaps God’s mercy, but a letter (paper) seems to favor the image of a king’s pardon arriving too late

  5 spake spoke

  9 Senseless inanimate

  12 make me make me out, distinguish me

  13 keep remain on

  15 as as though

  15 fits … mind mental anguish, unsettled thoughts

  16 slow … on reluctant he was to leave

  18 Thou … crow you should have waited until he appeared no bigger than a crow

  19 ere left before you ceased

  20 after-eye gaze after

  22 eyestrings muscles, nerves in the eye; thought to break when a person died or went blind

  23 diminution of space reduction, contraction of the size of everything

  24 pointed fashioned to a point, i.e. made him as small as her needle’s point

  30 With … vantage at his next opportunity

  35 shes women

  36 interest right

  37 At … midnight three of the hours specified for prayer by the Christian Church

  38 T’encounter … him i.e. they can meet in heaven through prayer

  38 orisons prayers

  41 charming acting as a charm, a spell to ward off evil

  42 north the north wind, which shakes buds as it blows, and stops them growing

  Act 1 Scene 4

  1.4 Location: Rome

  1.4 Philario means “loving, dear” (Greek)

  1.4 Iachimo the modern Italian spelling is Giacomo (James)

  2 of … note growing in reputation, like a crescent moon

  3 been … of been recognized as

  4 without … admiration without feeling any particular sense of admiration for him

  5 endowments qualities, attributes

  5 tabled listed

  11 behold … he i.e. there were many as noble as Posthumus there; eagles, the noblest birds, were thought to be able to stare at the sun

  13 weighed judged, assessed

  14 words … matter allows for him to be described in ways which falsely magnify his own worth

  16 approbation approval, praise

  17 divorce physical separation

  17 under her colours from her side

  18 be it but if only

  18 fortify support, justify

  19 battery military assault

  20 sojourn temporarily stay

  21 creeps acquaintance has he insinuated himself into your acquaintance

  25 suits is appropriate, suitable

  25 knowing knowledge/experience of the world

  29 story … hearing speak about him/sing his praises in front of him

  30 we … together we have been acquainted

  32 which … still which I will spend forever repaying, although I will still be in debt

  34 atone make peace between, reconcile

  35 put together set in opposition with each other

  35 mortal deadly, fatal

  38 rather … experiences preferred not to go along with what others said

  42 arbitrament of settlement (of the dispute) by

  48 suffer the report bear recounting

  49 fell out took place

  50 our country mistresses the women of our own countries/the women we have sex with (country puns on “cunt”)

  51 vouching claiming, swearing

  51 and … affirmation with a pledge to back up what he said with bloodshed if necessary

  53 attemptable able to be seduced

  56 by … out by now is worn out

  57 holds retains

  57 mind opinion

  60 abate her nothing not budge in any part of my high opinion of her

  60 profess myself confess I am

  62 hand-in-hand comparison which seeks to imply equality

  64 went before surpassed, were superior to

  68 rated estimated

  69 esteem value

  70 enjoys possesses

  71 unparagoned unequaled, matchless

  72 outprized … trifle surpassed in value by an insignificant thing (the ring)

  73 or either

  79 You … yours you may be able to call her yours in the legal sense (because you are married)

  80 strange … ponds i.e. a man’s neighbor may visit (and seduce) his wife; there are also cruder sexual undercurrents; strange was an epithet for “an illicit sexual partner”; fowl was a term for “a prostitute”; pond also means “vagina”

  80 ring plays on sexual sense of (Innogen’s) “vagina”

  81 brace pair

  81 unprizable estimations objects considered beyond value

  82 frail subject to human weakness

  82 casual subject to mischance, precarious

  83 that-way-accomplished courtier i.e. a womanizer, one who can court successfully

  86 convince persuade/overcome

  88 store plenty, an abundance

  89 leave here leave off now

  91 familiar at first on familiar terms right from the start

  92 get … yielding succeed in advancing upon; fencing terminology with strong sexual undertones

  94 friend befriend/become intimate with (with sexual implication)

  96 pawn the moiety wager one half

  96 to against

  97 something somewhat

  99 bar your offence prevent you taking it as a personal affront

  101 abused deceived

  102 persuasion conviction

  102 you … of you will get what you deserve

  107 came in came about

  109 put my estate bet all my capital

  110 th’approbation the proof

  113 ten thousand ducats anachronistic; ducats were gold coins used in Italy in Shakespeare’s time, not in ancient Rome; a huge sum even for a rich nobleman

  114 commend if you recommend

  115 conference meeting

  1
17 reserved preserved/averse to displays of emotion

  118 wage pledge, bet

  120 friend … wiser i.e. as her lover you know her well

  121 dram very small amount

  121 preserve stop, prevent

  122 But … fear perhaps alluding to Psalm 3:10, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom”

  122 that since

  124 but … tongue just your way of speaking, i.e. just idle talk

  125 graver more serious

  126 undergo undertake

  129 covenants drawn between’s terms of (legal) agreement drawn up between us

  132 have … lay not allow this wager

  134 testimony proof

  136 come off fail

  138 commendation (letter of) introduction, recommendation

  139 free entertainment informal, friendly reception (both words are capable of a sexual interpretation)

  140 articles betwixt us i.e. a legal agreement, drawn up

  141 make … her seduce her; with blatant sexual connotations

  148 covenant agreement, i.e. let’s shake on it

  150 lest … starve i.e. in case we have time to calm down and reflect, and end up calling it off

  153 Will this hold will they really go through with this

  154 from it back down

  Act 1 Scene 5

  1.5 Location: Britain, the royal court

  1 Whiles … ground while the dew is still on the ground; plants were believed to be at their freshest, most potent when covered with dew

  2 note list

  4 Dispatch see it done

  7 without offence without (wishing to cause) offense

  8 wherefore why

  9 compounds compounded drugs, i.e. drugs made by mixing different chemical elements together

  10 are … of cause

  10 languishing long and drawn-out

  11 But … deadly and although they work slowly, they are, nevertheless, deadly

  14 learned taught

  15 Distil? Preserve? extract the essences from plants and preserve them

  15 Yea so indeed so well

  17 confections mixtures (drugs)

  18 meet appropriate

  19 amplify … conclusions extend my knowledge through other experiments

  20 try test

  20 forces effects

  23 vigour strength

  24 Allayments antidotes

  24 act effect

  25 several various

  29 noisome and infectious physically noxious, harmful/morally corrupting

  30 content thee don’t worry

 

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