Five Revenge Tragedies: The Spanish Tragedy, Hamlet, Antonio's Revenge, The Tragedy of Hoffman, The Revenger's Tragedy (Penguin Classics)

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Five Revenge Tragedies: The Spanish Tragedy, Hamlet, Antonio's Revenge, The Tragedy of Hoffman, The Revenger's Tragedy (Penguin Classics) Page 41

by William Shakespeare


  He just wanted a decent book to read …

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  We believed in the existence in this country of a vast reading public for intelligent books at a low price, and staked everything on it’

  Sir Allen Lane, 1902–1970, founder of Penguin Books

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  PENGUIN CLASSICS

  Published by the Penguin Group

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  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

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  This edition first published in Penguin Classics 2012

  Introduction and editorial matter copyright © Emma Smith, 2012

  Cover: Mirror of life and death, French School, 17th century, in the Musée de la Ville de Paris, Musée Carnavalet, Paris (Photograph © Archives Charmet/The Bridgeman Art Library)

  All rights reserved

  The moral right of the author of the introduction and editorial material has been asserted

  Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

  ISBN: 978-0-14-196046-3

  11 hight: was called

  19 Acheron: river of the lower world. The description of the underworld here is derived from Virgil’s Aeneid, Book VI

  20 Charon: ferryman across the River Styx in the underworld

  23 Sol: the sun

  23 Thetis: daughter of the sea god Nereus

  25 knight marshal: officer in the English royal household with jurisdiction within 12 miles (20 km) of the palace

  28 strond: strand, shore

  29 fell: savage

  29 Avernus: lake entrance to the underworld

  30 Cerberus: three-headed guard dog of the underworld

  33 Minos, Aeacus and Rhadamanth: judges of the underworld

  36 leaves of lottery: in Virgil, lots were drawn to judge the destination of the dead in the underworld

  46 martialist: soldier

  49 Myrmidons: Achilles’ followers in Homer’s Iliad

  49 scour: move quickly

  55 Pluto: king of the underworld

  65 Furies: in Greek mythology, the angry avengers of crimes

  66 Ixion: punished by Zeus for lusting after his wife Hera, by being bound to an ever-spinning wheel

  67 usurers: money lenders

  70 wights: men

  73 Elysian: Elysium was the resting place for heroes and the virtuous

  75 adamant: hard stone or diamond

  76 Proserpine: Pluto’s consort, also known as Persephone

  79 doom: judgement

  82 gates of horn: in the Aeneid, the entrance for true visions or dreams

  85 wot: know

  90 mystery: hidden or secret thing

  1 camp: army

  8 tribute: ‘tax … in acknowledgement of submission’ (OED)

  12–14 O multum … juris: address derived from Roman poet Claudian: ‘O one much loved of God, for thee the heavens contend, and the united peoples fall down on bended knee: victory is sister to just right’ (Boas)

  20 deeper wage: more reward

  21 chivalry: gallant horsemanship

  23 bound: border

  27 colours: flags or banners

  30 rebound: echo

  32 squadron form: square formation

  33 wings of shot: armed troops on the outside of the formation

  34 push of pike: close combat

  38 ordnance: artillery

  41 cornet: wing of soldiers

  47 handy: hand-to-hand

  50 rampiers: ramparts

  52 Bellona: Roman goddess of war

  53 rain: Q ran

  54 shivered: shattered

  55–6 Pede pes … viro: ‘Foot against foot, spear against spear, arms clash on arms and man is assailed by man’ (not a direct quotation: Boas notes sources in Virgil and Curtius)

  56 Arma: Q Anni

  56 armis: Q annis

  59 scindered: sundered

  61 unbowelled: disembowelled

  62 purple: blood-soaked

  70 Here-hence: As a result

  73 insulting: scornfully triumphing over

  74 vaunts: brags

  76 Pricked forth: Spurred on

  82 carbines: cavalry

  83 Phoebus: the sun

  83 waning: Q wauing

  86 argument: token

  96 frolic: rejoice

  99 tucket: trumpet flourish instructing troops to march

  120 overcloying: excessively moving

  122 staying: stopping

  131 largess: generosity

  140 boots: profits

  142 colours: standards

  143 corsive: corrosive

  156 courser: horse

  160 privilege: sovereign authority

  161 whether: which

  168 partial: biased

  168 difference: disagreement

  171 lion’s death: proverbial, ‘the braver hunter is the one to kill the lion, rather than simply wear his pelt’

  176 censure: judgement

  178 sit beside: possibly set aside, forgo (Edwards)

  190 guerdon: reward

  15–17 Qui jacet … magis: collage from Alanus de Insulis, Seneca and Kyd’s own composition: ‘If one lies on the ground, one has no further to fall; towards me Fortune has exhausted her power to injure; there is nothing more that can happen to me’

  20 sable weed: black clothing

  22 despiteful: cruel
>
  23 blind: the visual iconography of Fortune had her blind (thus indifferent to merit) and standing on a rolling stone (thus mutable)

  33 distained: sullied

  48 reck: care for

  54 bewray: reveal

  57 mischief: misfortune

  82 Terceira: an island in the Azores

  93 envious: malicious

  7 nill: will not

  10 chevalier: gallant

  11 glorious cause: for love of Bel-imperia

  16 Nemesis: goddess of divine retribution

  20 Pallas: Pallas Athene, goddess patron of Athens

  20 Pergamus: Troy

  21 halberdiers: soldiers armed with halberds or long spears mounted with axes

  22 pauncht: stabbed in the belly

  22 dinged: knocked

  34 wound: embraced

  35 welding: carrying, wielding

  47 favour: item worn as a token of affection

  83 conceit: thought, imagination

  85 gage: ransom

  90 Tush: Expression of contempt or disapproval

  90 ambages: indirect speeches, ambiguities

  96 aspect: form

  98 words of course: formulaic speeches

  105 humorous: temperamental

  124 Rapt: Entranced

  132 fall to: begin eating

  137 pompous: stately

  137SD scutcheon: shield

  139 sound: fathom, understand

  139 mystery: hidden significance

  142 Albion: England

  145 Saracen: Muslim, Arabic (with connection to the Crusades)

  166 puissant: powerful

  176 Unless: Unless it were that

  3–10 In time the savage … stony wall: quoted from Watson’s sonnet in his Hecatompathia

  4 haggard: untrained

  4 stoop to lure: technical term from falconry: to come down for food

  13 feature: shape, proportions

  16 Pan and Marsyas: gods punished after challenging Apollo in contests of flute-playing; see also Tragedy of Hoffman, 1.3.2–3 and note

  16 quill: pen; reed pipe

  20 slandered: brought into disrepute

  21 sire: father

  25 uprear: raise

  27 beauty’s: Q beauteous

  27 thrall: slave or captive

  29 ecstasies: outbursts

  36 sound the bottom: discover

  43 Vien qui presto: ‘Come here quickly’ (Italian)

  49 conveyance: acting as go-between

  82 liberal: generous

  85 fraught: loaded

  91 unjust: dishonest

  107 tam armis quam ingenio: ‘by equal parts of force and skill’ (Mulryne)

  126 limed: baited

  127 smooth: flatter

  131 sleight: trickery

  4 contents: sources of contentment

  9 may: Q mad

  17SD Balthazar above: indicating his place over the stage in the gallery

  21 disjoined: separated

  37 countercheck: reply, rebuke

  42 bower: arbour

  45 Vesper: the morning star

  46 travellers: labourers

  49 ware: watchful

  50 prickle: thorn

  3 coy it: behave modestly

  6 froward: difficult, uncontrollable

  16 moiety: half-share

  22 motion: proposal

  34 forwardness: eagerness

  36 pitched: agreed

  42 will: wilfulness

  43 friends: relatives

  50 back: back-word, refusal

  8 faith: faithfulness

  13 match: meeting

  20 Luna: moon

  26 Flora: goddess of flowers and of spring

  29 record: sing

  33 Venus: goddess of love

  35 Mars: god of war, lover of Venus

  38 ruder: coarser

  41 ward: guard

  42 retort: turn back

  45 withal: Q with

  49 die: punning: achieve orgasm

  OSD shirt: nightshirt

  15 whilom: formerly

  28 misdone: done wrong

  39 author: perpetrator

  62 practice: treachery

  66 dirge: funeral song

  67–80 aliquis … sequatur: Kyd’s compilation of bits of Lucretius, Virgil and Ovid: ‘Let someone mix for me the herbs that the beautiful spring brings forth, and let a medicine be given for our pain: or let him offer juices, if there are any that will bring oblivion to our minds. I shall myself gather whatever herbs the sun brings forth, throughout the mighty world, into the fair realms of light. I shall myself drink whatever poison the sorceress contrives, whatever herbs too, the goddess of spells weaves together by her secret power. All things I shall essay, death even, until all feeling dies at once in my dead heart. Shall I never again, my life, see your face, and has eternal sleep buried your light? I shall die with you – so, so would I rejoice to go to the shades below. But nonetheless, I shall keep myself from a hasty death, in case then no revenge should follow your death’ (Edwards)

  73 herbarum: Q irraui (emendation Edwards, Mulryne)

  2 looked: anticipated, expected

  1 Infortunate: Subject to Fortune

  18 credit: belief

  37 mould: earth, character

  46 suggestion: accusation

  50 Phlegethon: infernal river of fire

  53 meed: reward

  55 lake: Acheron, the lake of hell

  64 entreated: treated

  65 commends: sends greetings

  78 quittal: repayment

  81 But: Except

  88 misconceived: mistakenly suspected

  101 entreat: plead

  12 secretary: confidant

  26 Red ink: presumably a note for the stagehands about the appearance of the bloody letter

  37 mean: means

  39 train: trap

  52 Close: Meet

  53 bewray: disclose

  79 condition: character

  81 humour: disposition

  87 prithee: I pray thee

  98 mount: rise (punning on the gallows)

  99 Che le Ieron: unclear: perhaps a corruption of the page’s name

  108 complot: conspiracy

  109 watch: constables

  115 expulse: expel

  123 haps: fortunes

  4 shift: succeed

  20 watch and ward: patrol

  32SD dag: gun

  36SD strives: struggles

  3 mistrust: anticipate

  24 fact: crime

  31 exasperate: render more severe

  38 policy: course of action; trick

  40 prosecutes: brings about

  42 limed: trapped (by being stuck in bird-lime)

  45 holp: helped

  46 fatch: stratagem

  59 stand: stand fast

  72 turned off: executed

  80 tickle: insecure

  82 uneffected: not done

  84 list not: do not wish to

  88 advantages: taking advantage

  89–90 Et quel … bastera: ‘And what I want, nobody knows; I know, and that’s enough for me’ (Italian)

  3 minority: under age

  4 uncertainty: irresolution

  11 descant: criticize

  8 consumeth: wears out

  13 regard: care about

  18 Gramercy: Thank you

  20 nearer: more serious

  23 gear: business; gallows

  40 approved: proved

  46 disfurnish: by custom, a hangman got the clothes of an executed criminal

  49 boot: purpose, recompense

  57 dispatch: do it quickly

  72 truss: close-fitting jacket; to hang

  88 marry: expression of surprise or outrage

  88 motion: proposal

  95 interdicted: forbidden

  97 intercepts: prevents

  107 Stand: Depend

  15 empyreal: the highest heavens

  16 countermured:
defensively double-walled

  19 Petergade: apparently the hangman’s version of Pedringano

  23 commission: authority

  32 writ: Q write

  54 accident: circumstance

  61 constrained: forced

  65 banned: cursed

  69 plain: complain

  1 purge: heal

  7 outrage: unrestrained behaviour

  10 whipstalk: whip handle (here, a toy)

  21 mirror: model, paragon

  2 sequestered: kept apart

 

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