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ANNE. I think, there are, fir; I heard them talk'd of.

SLEN. I love the sport well; but I fhall as foon quarrel at it, as any man in England:-You are afraid, if you fee the bear loose, are you not?

ANNE. Ay, indeed, fir.

SLEN. That's meat and drink to me now: I have feen Sackerfon loose, twenty times; and

more properly, explains the word,) a technical term. So, in our author's Love's Labour's Loft: " a quick venew of wit." Again, in Beaumont and Fletcher's Philafter::-" thou wouldst be loth to play half a dozen venies at Wafters with a good fellow for a broken head." Again, in The Two Maids of More-clacke, 1609: "This was a pafs, 'twas fencer's play, and for the after veny, let me ufe my skill." So, in The Famous Hiftory, &c. of Capt. Tho. Stukely, 1605: for forfeits and venneys given upon a wager at the ninth button of your doublet."

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Again, in the MSS. mentioned in the preceding note," and at any prize whether it be maister's prize, &c. whofoever doth play agaynfte the prizer, and doth ftrike his blowe and close with all, fo that the prizer cannot ftrike his blowe after agayne, shall wynne no game for any veneye fo given, althoughe it shold breake the prizer's

head." STEEVENS.

5 That's meat and drink to me now:] Dekkar has this proverbial phrafe in his Satiromaftix: " Yes faith, 'tis meat and drink to me.” WHALLEY. Sackerfon] Seckarfon is likewise the name of a bear in the old comedy of Sir Giles Goofecap. STEEVENS.

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Sackerfon, or Sacarfon, was the name of a bear that was exhibited in our author's time at Paris-Garden in Southwark. See an old

collection of Epigrams [by Sir John Davies] printed at Middlebourg (without date, but in or before 1598 :)

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Publius, a ftudent of the common law,

"To Paris-garden doth himself withdraw ;

"Leaving old Ployden, Dyer, and Broke, alone,
"To fee old Harry Hunkes and Sacarfon."

Sacarfon probably had his name from his keeper. So, in the Puritan, a comedy, 1607: "How many dogs do you think I had upon me?Almoft as many as George Stone, the bear; three at once." MALONE.

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have taken him by the chain: but, I warrant you, the women have fo cried and fhriek'd at it, that it pafs'd: '-but women, indeed, cannot abide 'em ; they are very ill-favour'd rough things.

Re-enter PAGE.

PAGE. Come, gentle mafter Slender, come; we stay for you.

SLEN. I'll eat nothing; I thank you, fir.

PAGE. By cock and pye, you shall not choose, fir: come, come.

SLEN. Nay, pray you, lead the way.

PAGE. Come on, fir.

SLEN. Mistress Anne, yourself shall go first.
ANNE. Not I, fir; pray you, keep on.

SLEN. Truly, I will not go firft; truly, la: I will not do you that wrong.

ANNE, I pray you, fir.

SLEN. I'll rather be unmannerly, than troublefome: you do yourself wrong, indeed, la. [Exeunt.

that it pafs'd:] It pafs'd, or this passes, was a way of speaking customary heretofore, to fignify the excefs, or extraordinary degree of any thing. The fentence completed would be, This paffes all expreffion, or perhaps, This passes all things. We ftill use passing well, paffing firange. WARBURTON.

8 By cock and pye,] This was a very popular adjuration, and occurs in many of our old dramatic pieces. See note on Act V. fc. i. K. Henry IV. P. II. STEEVENS.

SCENE II.

The fame.

Enter Sir HUGH EVANS and SIMPLE.

EVA. Go your ways, and afk of Doctor Caius' houfe, which is the way: and there dwells one mistress Quickly, which is in the manner of his nurse, or his dry nurfe, or his cook, or his laundry, his washer, and his wringer.

SIMP. Well, fir.

EVA. Nay, it is petter yet:-give her this letter; for it is a 'oman that altogether's acquaintance with mistress Anne Page; and the letter is, to defire and require her to folicit your mafter's defires to mistrefs Anne Page: I pray you, be gone; I will make an end of my dinner; there's pippins and cheese to come.

SCENE III.

A Room in the Garter Inn.

[Exeunt.

Enter FALSTAFF, Hoft, BARDOLPH, NYM, PISTOL, and ROBIN.

FAL. Mine host of the Garter,—

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HOST. What fays my bully-rook? Speak fchollarly, and wifely.

9 that altogether's acquaintance] The old copy readsaltogethers acquaintance; but thould not this be " that altogether's acquaintance," i. e. that is altogether acquainted? The English, I apprehend, would ftill be bad enough for Evans. TYRWHITT.

I have availed myfelf of this judicious remark. STEEVENS. my bully-rook?] The fpelling of this word is corrupted,

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FAL. Truly, mine hoft, I must turn away fome of my followers.

Host. Difcard, bully Hercules; cashier: let them wag; trot, trot.

FAL. I fit at ten pounds a week.

Hosr. Thou 'rt an emperor, Cæfar, Keifar,' and Pheezar. I will entertain Bardolph; he shall draw, he fhall tap: faid I well, bully Hector?

FAL. Do fo, good mine hoft.

and thereby its primitive meaning is loft. The old plays have generally bully-rook, which is right; and fo it is exhibited by the folio edition of this comedy, as well as the 4to. 1619. The latter part of this compound title is taken from the rooks at the chefs. STEEVENS.

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Bully-rook feems to have been the reading of fome editions: in others it is bully-rock. Mr. Steevens's explanation of it, as alluding to chefs-men, is right. But Shakspeare might poffibly have given it bully-rock, as rock is the true name of these men, which is foftened or corrupted into rook. There is feemingly more humour in bully-rock. WHALLEY.

3 Keifar,] The preface to Stowe's Chronicle obferves, that the Germans ufe the K for C, pronouncing Keyfar, for Cæfar, their general word for an emperor. TOLLET.

4 and Pheezar.] Pheezar was a made word from pheeze. "I'll pheeze you," fays Sly to the Hoftefs, in The Taming of the Shrew. MALONE.

s-faid I well,] The learned editor of the Canterbury Tales of Chaucer, in 5 vols. 8vo. 1775, obferves, that this phrase is given to the hoft in the Pardoere's Prologue:

«Said I not wel? I cannot fpeke in terme:" v. 12246. and adds, "it may be fufficient with the other circumstances of general refemblance, to make us believe, that Shakspeare, when he drew that character, had not forgotten his Chaucer." fame gentleman has fince informed me, that the paffage is not found in any of the ancient printed editions, but only in the MSS. STEEVENS.

The

I imagine this phrase must have reached our author in fome other way; for I fufpect he did not devote much time to the perufal of old Mfs. MALONE.

HOST. I have fpoke; let him follow: Let me fee thee froth, and lime: I am at a word; follow. [Exit Hoft. FAL. Bardolph, follow him; a tapfter is a good trade: An old cloak makes a new jerkin; a withered fervingman, a fresh tapfter: Go; adieu.

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BARD. It is a life that I have defired; I will thrive. [Exit BARD. PIST. O bafe Gongarian wight!' wilt thou the fpigot wield?

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- Let me fee thee froth, and lime:] Thus the quarto; the folio reads and live." This paffage had paffed through all the editions without fufpicion of being corrupted; but the reading of the old quartos of 1602 and 1619, Let me fee thee froth and lime, I take to be the true one. The Hoft calls for an immediate specimen of Bardolph's abilities as a tapfter; and frothing beer and liming fack were tricks practifed in the time of Shakspeare. The firft was done by putting foap into the bottom of the tankard when they drew the beer; the other, by mixing lime with the fack (i. e. fherry) to make it fparkle in the glafs. Froth and live is fenfe, but a little forced; and to make it fo we muft fuppofe the Hoft could guess by his dexterity in frothing a pot to make it appear fuller than it was, how he would afterwards fucceed in the world. Falstaff himself complains of limed fack. STEEVENS.

6 a wither'd fervingman, a fresh tapfter:] This is not improbably a parody on the old proverb-" A broken apothecary, a new doctor." See Ray's Proverbs, 3d edit. p. 2. STEEVENS.

70 bafe Gongarian wight! &c.] This is a parody on a line taken from one of the old bombaft plays, beginning,

"O bafe Gongarian, wilt thou the diftaff wield ?" I had marked the paffage down, but forgot to note the play. The folio reads-Hungarian.

Hungarian is likewife a cant term. So, in The Merry Devil of Edmonton, 1608, the merry Hoft fays, "I have knights and colonels in my houfe, and muft tend the Hungarians."

Again:

"Come ye Hungarian pilchers."

Again, in Weftward Hoe, 1607:

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Play, you louzy Hungarians."

Again, in News from Hell, brought by the Devil's carrier, by Thomas Decker, 1606: " the leane-jaw'd Hungarian would not lay out a penny pot of fack for himfelf." STEEVENS.

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