--_Halliwell_.
[335] To look sad. This term is often incorrectly explained. "Fye, how
impatience lowreth in your face" (_Com. Err_.), i.e., makes your face
look sad, opposed to the "merry look."--_Halliwell_. [_Lour_ is simply
a contracted form of _lower_.]
[336] Care.
[337] Compare "Merchant of Venice," iii. 4.--_Halliwell_.
[338] Not a term of reproach.--Compare "1 Henry VI."--_Halliwell_.
[339] Compare "Taming of the Shrew," ii. 1.--_Halliwell_.
[340] _Never_ in the original copy.--Halliwell.
[341] Compare "The Merchant of Venice," i. 3.--_Halliwell_.
[342] Drunkards.
[343] "Upstart unthrifts" (_Richard II_.)--_Halliwell_.
[344] Compare "Taming of the Shrew," i. 2: "O this woodcock, what an
ass it is!"--_Halliwell_.
[345] [Rather, perhaps, _dulsum_, i.e., sweet.]
[346] This confirms in some measure a reading in the "Taming of the
Shrew"--"Or so devote to Aristotle's Ethics."--_Halliwell_. [See Dyce's
2d edit. iii. 114, and the note.]
[347] "Begnaw with the bots" (_Taming of the Shrew_).--_Halliwell_.
[348] Owing to whom.
[349] Caraway comfits. See "2 Henry IV." and the blunders of the
commentators corrected in my "Dictionary of Archaisms," p. 231.--
_Halliwell_.
[350] Compare "Troilus and Cressida," ii. 2.--_Halliwell_.
[351] "Good wits will be jangling" (_Love's Labour's Lost_).--
_Halliwell_.
[352] A dagger. See "Hamlet," iii. 1.--_Halliwell_.
[353] Cared.
Pages:
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292