Richard III

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Richard III Page 26

by William Shakespeare


  3 obsequiously in a manner proper to the dead

  4 Lancaster i.e. Henry VI, former head of the House of Lancaster

  5 key-cold cold as a metal key (proverbial)

  6 ashes i.e. remains, lifeless body

  8 Be it let it be

  8 invocate invoke, call upon

  12 Lo look

  12 windows vents, i.e. wounds

  13 balm healing ointment/substance with which the dead are anointed (i.e. tears)

  17 direful hap dreadful fortune

  17 betide befall, happen to

  19 spiders, toads thought to be poisonous

  21 abortive monstrous, deformed

  22 Prodigious unnatural/ill-omened

  23 aspect appearance

  25 that may that (child)

  25 unhappiness ill fortune/misery

  29 Chertsey on the River Thames, in Surrey; site of a famous monastery

  30 Paul’s St. Paul’s Cathedral in London

  31 still as whenever

  35 devoted holy, devout

  40 Advance raise

  42 spurn upon kick

  46 Avaunt be gone

  49 curst ill-tempered/cursed, damnable

  50 hence get hence, go away

  52 exclaims outcries, exclamations

  54 pattern example, model

  58 thy … blood it was popularly believed that the wounds of a murder victim would bleed in the presence of the murderer

  58 exhales draws forth

  71 so is so

  73 wonderful extraordinary, astonishing

  73 devils … truth Anne interprets Richard’s am no beast to mean that, as neither man nor beast, he must be a devil

  75 Vouchsafe permit, consent

  76 leave permission

  77 circumstance detailed explanation

  78 defused dispersed, spreading

  82 leisure time, opportunity

  84 current genuine, valid

  85 despair spiritual hopelessness (thought to precede suicide)

  87 worthy … thyself i.e. committing suicide (a highly sinful act)

  88 unworthy dishonorable, contemptible/causeless, unjustified

  91 slave villain, wretch

  95 In … liest i.e. you lie outrageously

  96 falchion curved sword

  97 once at once

  102 aught anything

  105 hedgehog a contemptuous reference to Richard’s crest, which featured a wild boar

  110 holp helped

  115 bedchamber like hell, “chamber” could also be euphemistic for the vagina

  118 I hope so i.e. I certainly hope it will, as I shall never lie with you (in an ironic anticipation of future events, however, the phrase may also be construed as “I hope to lie with you”)

  120 keen sharp/eager

  120 encounter … wits plays on the sense of “sexual encounter of our genitals”

  122 timeless untimely, premature

  125 effect agent, perpetrator (Richard then shifts the sense to “outcome”)

  130 homicide murderer

  137 thou art both i.e. day and life

  138 would wish

  146 He lives i.e. there is a man

  148 Plantagenet the name was used by Richard Duke of York, Richard’s father

  157 infected mine both disease and love were thought to enter through the eyes

  158 basilisks mythical reptiles whose gaze could kill

  159 die plays on the sense of “achieve sexual orgasm”

  162 aspects appearance/looks, gazes

  164 No, when not even when

  165 Rutland Richard’s younger brother; his death is depicted in 3 Henry VI, Act 1 Scene 3

  166 black-faced evil, threatening, devilish

  167 father i.e. the Earl of Warwick (originally a Yorkist, although he later changed sides)

  170 That so that

  171 bedashed splattered

  172 humble lowly

  173 exhale draw out

  175 sued entreated, begged (for favor)

  176 smoothing flattering

  177 fee payment, reward

  186.1 lays … open bares his chest

  186.2 offers aims, makes to thrust

  190 set me on this probably has connotations of sexual arousal like provokèd

  190.1 falls lets fall

  191 take up me accept me (perhaps with connotations of “possess me sexually/make my penis erect”; Anne interprets “raise me from my kneeling position”)

  192 dissembler deceiver

  199 truer love i.e. Richard himself (supposedly a truer lover than the murdered Edward)

  202 figured in represented by

  212 Even so in just such a way

  220 presently immediately

  220 Crosby House Richard’s London house, in Bishopsgate Street; later referred to as Crosby Place

  224 expedient duty dutiful haste

  225 divers various, several

  225 unknown private, that cannot be divulged

  226 boon request, favor

  229 Tressell and Berkeley minor characters, not mentioned again in the play

  235 Whitefriars a priory in London

  236 humour manner, style, way

  242 bleeding witness i.e. Henry’s body

  242 by nearby

  243 bars obstacles

  244 suit courtship/formal supplication

  244 withal with

  246 all … nothing i.e. against huge odds, with everything stacked against me

  248 brave splendid, noble

  250 mood fit of fury

  250 Tewkesbury site of the Gloucestershire battle where the Lancastrians were defeated; Edward’s murder took place after the battle and is dramatized in 3 Henry VI, Act 5 Scene 5

  252 Framed … nature created when nature was most generous, lavish

  253 royal majestic, noble

  256 prime youthful manhood/springtime

  258 whose … moiety the entirety of whom is not worth half of Edward

  259 halts limps

  259 misshapen deformed

  260 denier small coin worth one tenth of a penny

  263 proper handsome, fine

  264 be … for buy, spend money on

  265 entertain employ

  265 score … of twenty or forty

  269 in into

  271 glass mirror, looking-glass

  272 shadow also means “reflection”; the shadow cast by the sun will substitute for the mirror’s image

  Act 1 Scene 3

  1.3 Location: the royal court, London

  3 brook it ill endure it with difficulty, take it badly

  4 entertain good comfort take comfort, be cheerful

  6 betide on happen to, befall

  8 includes incorporates, is the sum of

  9 goodly splendid, fine

  14 concluded legally finalized

  14 Protector guardian, who ruled on behalf of a king who was too young to do so

  16 miscarry die

  20 Countess Richmond Margaret Beaufort, Derby’s wife; by her first husband, Edmund Tudor, she was mother to Henry, Earl of Richmond (later Henry VII)

  20 good my my good

  26 envious malicious

  29 wayward obstinate, willful

  36 atonement reconciliation

  37 brothers only one brother, Anthony Woodville (Earl Rivers), appears in the play, but Shakespeare may have thought of him as two characters: Rivers and Woodville are listed separately in the opening stage directions at Act 2 Scene 1, and are addressed separately later in that scene

  39 warn summon

  41 happiness good fortune

  44 forsooth indeed, in truth

  44 stern harsh, unfriendly

  45 lightly little

  46 dissentious inflammatory, quarrelsome

  47 fair pleasing, charming

  48 smooth flatter

  48 cog fawn, flatter, deceive

  49 Duck … nods i.e. bow
in an affected, courtly manner

  49 apish idiotic/imitative

  51 plain unaffected, simple, honest

  53 silken smooth-tongued, ingratiating/elaborately dressed

  53 jacks knaves, low-born men; plays on Jack, a common name

  54 presence company/royal presence

  55 nor neither

  55 grace virtue/propriety/nobility (picking up on grace as a form of address in the previous line)

  60 breathing-while time to draw breath

  61 lewd wicked/ignorant/lowly

  65 belike probably/perhaps

  68 to send summon (you)

  70 wrens small, gentle birds (unlike large, predatory eagles)

  74 friends relatives

  77 brother i.e. George, Duke of Clarence

  81 noble gold coin worth about a third of a pound (puns on ennoble)

  82 careful full of cares

  83 hap fortune

  88 draw me implicate me/represent me

  88 suspects suspicions

  90 late recent

  94 preferments promotions, advancements

  96 desert deserving, merit

  97 marry by the Virgin Mary (Richard goes on to shift the sense to “wed”)

  100 stripling young man

  101 Iwis indeed, certainly

  101 grandam grandmother

  105 gross base/wicked/excessive

  108.1 Queen Margaret historically, the widow of Henry VI was imprisoned after the battle of Tewkesbury, and later exiled to her native France

  111 state rank

  111 seat throne

  112 Threat threaten

  113 avouch’t affirm, declare it

  114 adventure risk

  115 pains efforts (made on behalf of the king)

  116 Out exclamation of outrage and impatience

  119 Ere before

  120 packhorse workhorse

  121 proud ambitious, arrogant

  126 factious for on the side of, promoting dissent in the interests of

  127 husband … slain historically, Elizabeth’s first husband, Sir John Grey, was killed fighting for the Lancastrians, although in 3 Henry VI (Act 3 Scene 2) he is depicted as having fought for the Yorkists

  128 battle army

  130 ere this before now

  131 Withal moreover

  133 Clarence … Warwick Clarence and the Earl of Warwick deserted the Yorkists; Clarence married Warwick’s daughter, but later returned to the Yorkist cause, events that are depicted in 3 Henry VI

  133 father father-in-law

  134 forswore himself broke his oath (of loyalty)

  137 meed reward

  139 pitiful full of pity, compassionate

  140 childish-foolish innocent, inexperienced

  141 Hie hurry

  142 cacodemon evil spirit

  144 urge bring forward, offer as evidence

  157 pilled pillaged, robbed

  159 If … rebels Even if you do not bow to me as your queen, then you tremble like the rebels who deposed me

  161 gentle noble, high-born/kind

  161 villain low-born, rustic/scoundrel: the phrase is oxymoronic

  162 mak’st thou are you doing

  163 But repetition of merely recounting

  163 marred destroyed

  164 make do

  167 abode remaining

  169 thou i.e. Elizabeth

  172 curse … paper before his death, Richard Duke of York curses Margaret after she mockingly places a paper crown on his head (see 3 Henry VI, Act 1 Scene 4)

  175 clout cloth

  176 pretty youthful, fine-looking

  176 Rutland York’s young son; the episode with the cloth also appears in 3 Henry VI, Act 1 Scene 4

  179 plagued punished ceaselessly

  181 that babe i.e. Rutland

  184 No … prophesied there was no man who did not prophesy

  187 catch seize

  192 but answer for merely equal

  192 peevish foolish, childish/obstinate

  194 dull thick, dark, sluggish

  194 quick vigorous, lively, sharp

  195 surfeit sickness resulting from overindulgence

  199 like the same

  204 Decked adorned, dressed

  204 stalled installed

  208 standers-by bystanders, lookers-on

  212 unlooked unforeseen, unexpected

  213 charm magic spell, curse

  213 hag witch

  217 them i.e. the heavens

  220 still constantly

  220 begnaw eat away at, gnaw

  221 for to be

  223 deadly murderous

  226 elvish-marked physically marked by evil elves at birth

  226 abortive monstrous, deformed

  226 rooting hog i.e. hunched and greedy; alludes to the boar on Richard’s crest

  227 sealed … nativity branded at birth

  228 slave of nature slave to bestial natural impulses/one irredeemably marked out by nature

  229 slander disgrace, shame

  229 heavy pregnant, weighty/sorrowful

  230 issue offspring

  231 rag discarded scrap

  232 Margaret Richard makes Margaret the subject of her insults to him

  236 cry thee mercy beg your pardon

  238 looked for expected

  239 period end

  242 painted artificial/made-up with cosmetics

  242 vain flourish meaningless, frivolous adornment

  242 fortune (rightful) position

  243 bottled swollen (with venom), rounded, bottle-shaped

  245 thou whet’st you are sharpening

  247 bunch-backed hunchbacked

  248 False-boding falsely prophesying

  248 frantic deranged, mad

  251 well served treated as befits you (Margaret maintains the sense of “treated” and adds the sense of “obeyed, paid respect to”)

  252 duty respect, deference

  256 Master Marquis Margaret contemptuously prefaces the aristocratic “marquis” with the form of address for an untitled man

  256 malapert impertinent

  257 fire-new brand new, newly minted

  257 current valid, legitimate

  258 nobility continues the coining imagery with a quibble on “noble” (a gold coin)

  264 so high this high (i.e. noble)

  265 eyrie nest/brood of young birds of prey (especially eagles, king of birds)/noble stock of children

  266 dallies with teases, plays with

  266 scorns the sun eagles were thought to be able to gaze unblinkingly into the sun

  267 sun puns on son

  272 suffer endure, permit

  278 My charity the charity I feel/the charity I am shown

  278 outrage violence, hostility

  278 life my shame the only life I am allowed is a dishonorable one/I am ashamed to live

  279 still perpetually

  283 fair good fortune

  285 compass bounds

  286 pass go any further than

  288 but anything other than that

  291 Look when whenever

  292 venom poisonous

  292 rankle inflict a festering wound

  294 marks blemishes/identifying insignia/aims, sights

  297 respect deem worthy of listening to

  299 soothe flatter, humor

  311 vantage advantages, benefits (i.e. being queen)

  311 her wrong the wrong done to her

  312 hot eager

  312 do somebody good i.e. help Edward to the crown

  313 cold ungrateful, indifferent

  315 franked … fatting penned in to be fattened up (for slaughter)

  318 scathe harm

  319 well advised cautious

  324 wait upon attend

  326 mischiefs wicked, evil deeds

  326 abroach in motion

  327 lay … of impose as a serious accusation against (i.e. blame on)


  328 cast in darkness caused to be imprisoned (with connotations of death)

  329 beweep cry over

  329 gulls idiots, gullible people

  331 allies supporters, relatives

  332 stir incite, stir up

  333 whet encourage, incite

  338 ends scraps

  341 hardy bold

  342 dispatch carry out (plays on the sense of “kill”)

  346 repair make your way

  347 sudden swift

  348 obdurate inflexible, determined

  349 well-spoken articulate, persuasive

  350 mark pay attention to, listen to

  351 prate chat

  354 eyes drop millstones proverbial image of hard-heartedness

  354 fall let fall, drop

  355 straight straightaway

  Act 1 Scene 4

  1.4 Location: the Tower of London

  1.4 Keeper guard (this role could be conflated with Brackenbury)

  1 heavily sadly

  5 spend pass/expend (like money)

  6 Though ’twere even if it were

  7 dismal ominous, sinister

  13 hatches deck

  14 cited up recalled

  17 giddy swaying, unstable

  19 stay steady, restrain

  20 main sea

  27 Inestimable impossible to count or value

  27 unvalued priceless

  37 yield the ghost die

  37 envious flood malicious sea

  38 Stopped in shut up, blocked in

  39 vast boundless/empty

  40 bulk body

  42 sore serious, extreme

  45 melancholy flood the River Styx, which had to be crossed to get to Hades, the classical underworld

  46 sour ferryman Charon, who ferried souls to Hades

  47 kingdom … night Hades, the underworld

  48 stranger foreign, newly arrived

  50 perjury oath-breaking; Clarence broke his oath of allegiance to Warwick by returning to fight for the Yorkists after he and Warwick had changed sides to support the Lancastrians

  51 monarchy kingdom (the underworld)

  51 afford offer, give to

  53 shadow ghost (of Prince Edward, Henry VI’s son)

  54 shrieked ghosts were traditionally supposed to speak in shrill voices

  55 fleeting fickle, capricious

  56 field battlefield

  57 Furies in classical mythology, three female spirits of vengeance

  58 legion army

  59 Environed surrounded

  61 season while, time

  64 though if

  68 requites rewards, repays

  73 prithee beg you (literally “I pray thee”)

  74 heavy oppressed, burdened, sorrowful

  76 breaks cracks, disrupts

  76 seasons natural rhythms of time

  76 reposing hours time for rest

  77 noontide midday

  78 for as

  79 for at the cost of, as the result of

  80 for in exchange for

 

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