Antony and Cleopatra

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Antony and Cleopatra Page 23

by William Shakespeare


  Directed by Adrian Noble (1982). Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust

  Reconstructed Elizabethan Playhouse © Charcoalblue

  THE MODERN LIBRARY EDITORIAL BOARD

  Maya Angelou

  •

  A. S. Byatt

  •

  Caleb Carr

  •

  Christopher Cerf

  •

  Harold Evans

  •

  Charles Frazier

  •

  Vartan Gregorian

  •

  Jessica Hagedorn

  •

  Richard Howard

  •

  Charles Johnson

  •

  Jon Krakauer

  •

  Edmund Morris

  •

  Azar Nafisi

  •

  Joyce Carol Oates

  •

  Elaine Pagels

  •

  John Richardson

  •

  Salman Rushdie

  •

  Oliver Sacks

  •

  Carolyn See

  •

  Gore Vidal

  Copyright © 2007, 2009 by The Royal Shakespeare Company

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Modern Library, an imprint of

  The Random House Publishing Group, a division of

  Random House, Inc., New York.

  “Royal Shakespeare Company,” “RSC,” and the RSC logo are trademarks or

  registered trademarks of The Royal Shakespeare Company.

  The version of Antony and Cleopatra and the corresponding footnotes

  that appear in this volume were originally published in William Shakespeare

  Complete Works, edited by Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen, published

  in 2007 by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House

  Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.

  eISBN: 978-1-58836-834-8

  www.modernlibrary.com

  v3.0

  1 dotage folly/infatuation/senility

  general’s i.e. Antony’s

  2 measure prescribed limit

  goodly fine

  3 files and musters rows of assembled troops

  4 plated armored

  Mars Roman god of war

  bend direct

  5 office service, duty

  6 tawny brown-skinned

  front forehead, face (plays on the sense of “front line of troops”)

  8 reneges renounces, abandons

  temper moderation, restraint/resilience (used of swords’ hardness)

  10 gipsy’s Gypsies were believed to come from Egypt; “gipsy” was also a term for a deceitful woman or whore

  Flourish trumpet fanfare announcing the approach or departure of an important person

  Train retinue, followers

  Eunuchs castrated males, often employed in Oriental courts

  12 triple … world Mark Antony was one of three triumvirs who ruled the lands conquered by Rome

  13 strumpet loose woman or whore

  14 tell relate (in his reply, Antony responds to the sense of “count”)

  15 beggary … reckoned if love can be calculated, it’s worthless

  16 bourn boundary, limit

  17 Then … earth i.e. his love’s infinitely greater than the known world

  19 Grates me! How annoying!

  The sum give me the gist

  20 them i.e. the news

  21 Fulvia Antony’s wife

  perchance perhaps

  22 scarce-bearded Caesar Octavius Caesar, another of the triumvirs and great-nephew of Julius Caesar; he was twenty-three, twenty years younger than Antony

  23 mandate command

  24 Take in conquer, occupy

  enfranchise liberate

  26 How what

  27 Perchance? … like Perhaps? No, almost certainly

  28 dismission dismissal, order to leave

  30 process summons (legal term)

  33 homager vassal, one who acknowledges the duty of loyalty and obligation

  else so or else

  34 scolds quarrels noisily/chastises with violent language

  35 Tiber Rome’s chief river

  36 ranged ordered (with connotations of buildings set out in a line or troops drawn up in ranks)

  37 dungy made up of or abounding in dung

  39 mutual intimate (especially in sexual sense)

  40 twain pair

  bind oblige, constrain with legal authority

  41 On … punishment a phrase used in official statutes; Antony makes a public proclamation of their love

  weet know

  42 peerless matchless

  44 and not if he did not

  45 seem pretend to be

  47 stirred inspired/sexually aroused

  49 confound waste, ruin

  conference conversation

  50 stretch pass/be extended

  51 sport entertainment (with connotations of sexual pleasure)

  53 Fie exclamation of disgust or reproach

  wrangling noisily contentious

  54 Whom everything becomes whom all things suit, who is beautified by all moods

  chide scold, reprimand

  57 No i.e. I shall hear no

  59 qualities characteristics, dispositions

  61 with by

  prized so slight valued so little

  62 when … Antony i.e. he fails to live up to his great reputation

  63 property special personal quality

  64 still always

  65 full deeply

  66 approves proves right

  68 Rest you happy remain fortunate, go well

  Soothsayer one who foretells the future

  2 absolute perfect

  4 charge decorate, festoon

  horns with garlands cuckolds (men with unfaithful wives) were fancifully supposed to grow horns on their foreheads; to festoon them with garlands suggests Charmian’s husband will be a champion cuckold

  11 banquet a dessert course of sweetmeats, fruit and wine

  16 fairer more fortunate/beautiful/plump/spotless, pale

  18 paint use cosmetics

  20 prescience foreknowledge

  22 beloving loving

  23 liver the organ regarded as the seat of the passions

  25 Good now well then, come on

  26 forenoon morning

  27 Herod of Jewry King of Judaea who ordered the slaughter of all male infants in an attempt to kill the young Jesus Christ; he appears as the villain in numerous morality plays

  28 homage acknowledge allegiance to

  31 figs usually euphemistic for the vagina; possible phallic connotations here

  32 proved experienced

  34 belike perhaps/probably

  have no names be illegitimate

  35 wenches girls

  must shall

  38 Out exclamation of impatience or irritation

  forgive … witch absolve you of the charge of witchcraft (because his predictions are worthless)

  39 are privy to know of, are familiar with

  44 drunk to bed to go to bed drunk

  45 presages foretells

  47 Nilus presageth famine Charmian is being ironic; the fertility of the River Nile’s flood ensured good harvests

  48 wild flighty/mischievous/lustful

  49 oily palm moist palms were thought to indicate sensuality

  fruitful prognostication sign of fertility

  50 scratch mine ear itching ears proverbially signify an enjoyment of hearing novelties

  workaday humdrum, ordinary

  54 I have said there is no more to be said

  58 Not … nose implies that his penis would be a better place for an extra inch (though the nose itself often had phallic connotations)

  61 go walk/have sex/carry a child

  Isis Egyptian goddess of the
moon and fertility

  63 fifty-fold fifty times over

  64 cuckold man with an unfaithful wife

  65 matter … weight something of greater importance/(lover with a) bigger penis/the weight of a lover’s body during sex/the weight of a child during pregnancy

  67 loose-wived with an unfaithful wife

  68 foul ugly

  knave fellow

  69 uncuckolded with a faithful wife

  keep decorum behave appropriately/observe what is proper to character and rank

  73 they’d … do’t they would stop at nothing even if it meant making themselves whores

  81 A Roman thought a serious thought, imbued with Roman notions of virtue and honor

  85 We the royal plural

  86 field battlefield

  89 time’s state circumstances at the time

  90 jointing their force uniting their forces

  91 better issue greater success

  92 encounter battle

  drave them drove them (out of Italy)

  97 Who … flattered I will listen to a truth-teller as if he were a flatterer, even if he tells of death

  99 Labienus rebel Roman general who defected to the Parthians after the defeat of Brutus and Cassius at the battle of Philippi

  100 stiff formidable, grave

  Parthian Asiatic people whose army were challenging Roman expansion in the Middle East

  101 Extended seized upon (legal term)

  Euphrates one of the two main rivers of Mesopotamia (Iraq)

  103 Lydia ancient country of Asia Minor

  Ionia ancient region of Anatolia (Turkey)

  104 wouldst wanted, meant to

  106 home directly, bluntly

  mince … tongue do not moderate public opinion

  108 Rail … phrase scold me in the way that Fulvia would

  111 quick lively

  still inactive

  our … earing being told of our misdeeds improves us as plowing (earing) does land

  114 Sicyon ancient city situated in the northern Peloponnese, southern Greece

  how what is

  117 stays … will awaits your command

  120 What who

  125 Importeth it concerns

  126 Forbear me leave me alone

  128 What … again we often wish to have again what we’ve thrown away in contempt

  130 By revolution low’ring decreasing over the course of time (as the wheel of fortune turns)

  132 could would willingly

  133 enchanting bewitching, with the power to cast spells

  135 idleness indolence/folly

  139 mortal fatal, deadly

  suffer permit/undergo/experience pain at

  142 die plays on the sense of “orgasm”

  145 noise rumor

  146 upon … moment over a much less important matter (moment quibbles on the sense of “orgasm”)

  147 mettle spirit, vitality/sexual vigor

  148 celerity swiftness

  149 cunning perhaps a buried resonance of “cunt/con”

  151 part plays on the sense of “sexual part, vagina”

  153 almanacs calendars containing astrological and meteorological forecasts

  154 Jove supreme Roman god who controlled the rain; the reference may recall Jove’s seduction of Danae when he took the form of a shower of gold

  155 Would I wish

  156 piece of work masterpiece/whore

  157 withal with

  158 your travel i.e. reputation as a traveler (puns on “travail,” i.e. “work/sexual labor”)

  166 shows … earth shows men that the gods are the earth’s tailors (replacing worn-out wives with new ones as tailors make new clothes out of old ones); tailors were proverbially lecherous

  therein in this respect

  167 members plays on the sense of “penises”

  169 cut shock, blow/vagina

  case plays on the sense of “vagina”

  170 crowned plays on the idea of the encircling vagina

  consolation puns on “con” (vagina)

  smock woman’s undergarment, hence woman in her sexual capacity

  171 petticoat woman’s skirt or undergarment, hence woman in her sexual capacity

  175 business plays on the sense of “copulation”

  broached Enobarbus widens the sense of the word from “started” to incorporate the sexual sense of “pricked, penetrated”

  177 abode staying

  178 light frivolous/indecent, lewd

  180 expedience speed/expedition requiring haste

  181 leave to part permission to depart

  alone only

  182 touches motives

  184 contriving working or scheming on Antony’s behalf

  185 Petition … home urge us to come home

  Sextus Pompeius younger son of Pompey the Great, the defeated rival of Octavius Caesar’s great-uncle Julius Caesar

  186 given … to challenged, defied

  187 slippery fickle, unreliable

  189 throw bestow

  190 Pompey the Great i.e. the title of Sextus Pompeius’ father

  dignities titles, honors

  191 high great/dignified/proud

  192 blood and life vigor and spirit

  stands up For shows himself to be/claims to be

  193 main greatest, leading

  quality abilities/party, supporters

  going on continuing, being maintained

  194 The … danger may endanger the very frame of the world (or perhaps “… the borders of the Roman empire”)

  courser’s large horse used in battle

  195 courser’s … poison refers to the belief that a horse hair placed in stagnant water would turn into a snake, a phenomenon caused by microscopic fauna attaching themselves to the hair and causing it to move

  198 remove departure

  196 Say … hence tell those who serve me that I wish to depart quickly

  2 did … since have not seen him recently

  4 I … you i.e. do not say I sent you

  sad serious/sorrowful

  8 hold follow, adopt

  9 like same

  11 give him way let him have his own way

  cross thwart, obstruct

  13 Tempt provoke/test

  forbear (you would) desist

  16 sullen serious/melancholy

  17 breathing voice, speech

  19 thus long so long (before I die)

  the … it my constitution won’t survive the strain

  22 stand … me i.e. give me air

  24 eye look in your eye

  25 the married woman i.e. Fulvia

  36 false unfaithful

  Riotous madness unrestrained, wanton folly (on my part)

  37 mouth-made i.e. insincere, not from the heart

  38 in swearing even as they are being sworn

  40 colour pretext

  41 sued staying begged to stay

  43 our my (Cleopatra uses the royal plural as she reminds Antony of his former praises of her)

  44 brows bent arched eyebrows

  none our parts not one of my features (was)

  45 a … heaven a child of heaven/inherently divine

  48 How now exclamation of reproach

  49 inches height/manly strength (with phallic connotations)

  50 heart courage, resolution

  Egypt Cleopatra/the country

  54 in use as (financial) security/in trust (legal term)/for your use (with connotations of sexual employment)

  55 civil swords swords drawn in civil war

  56 port city gate/harbor

  57 Equality … faction having an equal division of power in the state (between Octavius Caesar and Lepidus) produces factional squabbles over small details

  58 hated … love those who were hated, having grown strong, are now loved

  60 apace rapidly

  62 Upon … state under the present government

  63 purge cleanse, purify itself
(medical term referring to the use of emetics or laxatives)

  64 particular personal concern

  65 safe make safe

  71 garboils brawls, disturbances

  best best of all (or possibly, referring to Fulvia, “when showed herself to be at her best”)

  74 sacred vials lachrymatory bottles; small vessels placed in Roman graves and thought to have contained mourners’ tears

  77 know learn

  78 The … bear my intentions

  are, or cease stand or fall

  79 th’advice the judgment

  fire … slime sun that brings fertility to the mudbanks of Egypt’s River Nile

  82 thou affects you desire

  83 lace the ties of her bodice as she struggles for breath

  84 let it be leave it alone

  85 So Antony loves Antony loves in just such a changeable manner/depending on whether or not Antony loves me

  86 forbear be patient/control yourself

  87 give true evidence bear witness

  stands will sustain

  92 Belong to Egypt are shed for the Queen of Egypt

  93 dissembling playacting

  95 heat my blood make me angry/passionate

  96 meetly fairly good

  98 target small shield; Cleopatra completes Antony’s phrase and makes it into a blustering theatrical oath

  mends improves (in his act)

  100 Herculean heroic, prodigiously strong; Antony’s family claimed descent from the Greek hero Hercules

  become … chafe carry off his anger convincingly

  107 oblivion forgetfulness/loss, abandonment

  108 all forgotten forgetful/completely forgotten

  109 But were it not

  idleness foolishness/frivolity/triviality/worthlessness

  110 holds … subject considers frivolity beneath you/means that you are in control of frivolity

  112 sweating labour the language of childbirth, continued with bear

  115 becomings attractive qualities

  116 Eye look, seem

  119 laurel … feet on his return to Rome, a victorious general wore a laurel wreath, and had flowers and rushes strewn in his path

  122 Our … thee i.e. although separated physically they will still be together since they are joined spiritually

  3 competitor associate, partner (plays on the sense of “rival”)

  5 Is he is

  6 Queen of Ptolemy i.e. Cleopatra; in keeping with Egyptian royal tradition she was married first to her brother Ptolemy XIII and, after he was accidentally drowned, to a younger brother, Ptolemy XIV, whom she was subsequently thought to have poisoned

  7 gave audience received messengers

  8 Vouchsafed condescended

  9 abstract epitome, summary

  13 spots of heaven stars; his faults stand out against his virtues as the stars do against the dark

 

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