Chapter 3 of 3 · 2407 words · ~12 min read

Part I

._, imitation of passage from, iii. 219

Herring-bones, iii. 344

Hey-pass re-pass, ii. 381

Heywood, Thomas, popularity of his _If you know not me you know nobody_, iii. 87

High-lone, i. 172

High-noll'd, i. 165

Hipponax, iii. 359

Hiren ("Hast thou not Hiren here?"), iii. 26

Hogson, iii. 319

Hole (part of a prison), iii. 106

Honorificabilitudinitatibus, ii. 92

Horn-fair, iii. 72

Hout, i. 65

Huddle, i. 213

Hull, i. 87; ii. 250

Hyena, iii. 115; confused by Marston with the panther, ii. 347

Hymen represented in a saffron robe, i. 261

_Imagines Deorum_, iii. 270

Imbraid, i. 117, 283

Incubus, i. 107, 172

Inductions to plays, i. 7

Ingenious, ii. 109, 397

Injury (verb), iii. 381

Instaur'd, ii. 333

Intellectual, iii. 372

Inward, i. 282

Io! i. 183

Irishmen, commendable bashfulness of, i. 265

Italy, vices brought to England from, iii. 275

Jakes of Lincoln's Inn, ii. 368

James I, his _Poetical Exercises_, iii. 281; James' knights, sneer at, iii. 79

Jawn, i. 129

Jellied, i. 114, 126; ii. 291

Jingling spurs, i. 233

Jobbernole, iii. 301, 341

Jones, Robert, quotation from his _First Book of Songs and Airs_, ii. 33

Jonson, Ben, compliment to, i. 320; allusion to a passage in his _Volpone_, ii. 190; sneer at his _Sejanus_, ii. 235; ridiculed, iii. 305

Jove (influence of the planet Jupiter), ii. 292

Judas' red beard, iii. 166

Julia (daughter of Augustus), witty saying of, ii. 12

_Julius Cæsar_, quoted, iii. 215

Juvenal imitated, iii. 308-9

Ka me, ka thee, iii. 30

Keel, i. 77; ii. 321

Kempe's Jig, iii. 372

King of flames, ii. 292

_King John_, quoted, ii. 354

Kinsing, iii. 369

Kinsayder, ii. 350

Knight's ward, iii. 106

Knighthood purchased from King James, iii. 79

Knights of the mew, ii. 322

Knock, i. 31

Knurly, i. 166

Lady-bird, iii. 104

Lælius Balbus, ii. 130

Lamb, Charles, his criticisms on Marston, i. 49, 100; his remarks on the Decay of Symbols, ii. 338

Lanch (= lance), ii. 193

Lanthorn and candle-light, i. 35; iii. 202

Laver-lip, iii. 291

Lavolta, i. 183

Lay, iii. 88

Lay in lavender, iii. 100

Leese, iii. 346

Leg of a lark is better than the body of a kite, iii. 104

_Legend of Lies_, ii. 69

Legs (= bows), iii. 264

Lemon's juice, iii. 350

Lent, consumption of flesh forbidden during, iii. 203

Leopards, their fondness for wine, iii. 238

Lettuce, iii. 320

Lie, ii. 16

Lindabrides, ii. 55

Linstock, i. 30

Lion, curious belief concerning, iii. 237

London licket, iii. 14

Long stock, ii. 337

Loose ("at the loose"), ii. 387

Los guantes, i. 276

Lovery, iii. 337

_Lozenges of Sanctified Sincerity_, i. 255

Lugg'd boot, iii. 378

Lusk, iii. 335, 358

Luskish, iii. 324

Lusty Laurence, iii. 289

Luxuriousness, iii. 349

M. under your girdle, iii. 92

Mace, iii. 277

Main, ii. 406

Make ("What should we make here?"), iii. 131

Male lie, iii. 308

Malice (verb), ii. 40, 91, 109

Mandragora, iii. 114

Mandrake, iii. 219

Mannington, George, his woeful ballad, iii. 118

March-panes, ii. 373

Marry faugh, iii. 11

Marry muff, i. 169

Martial quoted, ii. 28, 110

Mary Ambree, i. 22

Mason's _Mulleasses_, allusion to passage of, iii. 31; quoted, _Addenda_, vol. i.

Maypole (term of abuse), i. 23

Measure, i. 184, 276; ii. 43

Measuring, iii. 311

_Merchant of Venice_ quoted, iii. 34

Mere, merely, i. 236, 320; ii. 297

Methodist Musus, iii. 308

Metreza, i. 213

Mincing capreal, iii. 372

Minikin, i. 51, 80

Minikin-tickler, ii. 401

Minioning, i. 279

_Mirror of Knighthood_, i. 300; ii. 69

_Mirror for Magistrates_, iii. 283

Modern, i. 11; iii. 364

Monmouth caps, iii. 84

Month's mind, iii. 135

Moorfields (favourite spot for beggars), iii. 13

More hair than wit, iii. 199

Mortimer's numbers, iii. 363

Motion (= proposal), i. 159; ii. 51, 96; iii. 123

Motion (= puppet-show), ii. 51

Mott, iii. 332

Much (ironical), i. 243, 251, &c.

Muckender, ii. 359

Mumchance, ii. 382

Murr, i. 153; ii. 140

Muscovy glass, i. 234

Music-houses, i. 185

Mycerinus, iii. 243

Naples' canker, iii. 309; Naples' pestilence, ii. 349

Nashe, Thomas, quoted, iii. 48, 225, 273

Natalis Comes, iii. 270

Neast (nest) of goblets, ii. 7

Nectar-skink, ii. 307

Ne'er-crazed, iii. 355

Nemis, iii. 289

Nile, dogs drinking on the bank of, ii. 281

Nitty, iii. 276, 370

No point, ii. 77

Noddy, iii. 189

Noise, ii. 43

Nuzzel, ii. 372

O God, i. 32

_O hone, hone_, iii. 98

O Lord, sir, ii. 30

Obligation, ii. 57

Occupant, iii. 300, 349

Occupation, ii. 219

O'er-peise, i. 310

Old cut (= old fashion), i. 11

One and thirty, iii. 329

Ophelia, iii. 52

Ophiogeni, iii. 310

Outrecuidance, iii. 95

Owe, ii. 259

Ox-pith, i. 239

Packstaff epithets, iii. 338; packstaff rhymes, iii. 310

Pages, their fondness for dicing, ii. 382

Paize, i. 100, 121; ii. 327

Palæphatus, iii. 311

Pale, ii. 287

Palladium, ii. 252

Palmerin de Oliva, ii. 69

Pane, ii. 337; iii. 349

Pantable, pantofle, i. 29; ii. 382

Parcel-gilt, ii. 57

Parkets, ii. 141

Parmeno ("nothing _ad Parmenonis suem_"), i. 204

Parted, iii. 20

Parthenophil, iii. 358

Party per pale, ii. 345

Passion, i. 90

Pavin, iii. 340

Peat, ii. 339; iii. 100

Peele, Gronge, _Merry Jests_ of, i. 40

Peevish, iii. 254

_Peggy's complaint for the death of her Willy_, ii. 29

Pepper in the nose, ii. 321

Peregal, i. 55

Perfumed jerkin, i. 314

Perpetuana, ii. 343

Persius quoted, ii. 111

Peterman, iii. 38

Petronel, i. 19

_Physic against Fortune_, i. 255

Pickhatch, iii. 319, 376

Pill (= peel), i. 99

Pillowbear, iii. 253

Pin and the web, iii. 423

Pirates hanged at Wapping, iii. 91

Pistol, Ancient (scraps of his rant), iii. 11

Placket, ii. 383

Plastic, i. 234

Plat, i. 54

Play-bills stuck on posts, iii. 302

Plunge, i. 105

Plutarch quoted, ii. 152, 266

Pole-head, ii. 348

Pomander, i. 294

Pommado reversa, iii. 375

Pompey the huge, i. 214

Ponado, iii. 42

Poor John, i. 89

Popeling, iii. 262

Porcpisce, iii. 69

Port Esquiline, iii. 351, 361

Possessed persons able to speak in various tongues, i. 212

Poting-stick, i. 308

Prest, ii. 250; iii. 312

Priapus' gardens, iii. 302

Proface, iii. 303

Prostitution (= whore), ii. 13

Protest (use of the word considered affected), ii. 345

Pudding tobacco, ii. 344

Pug, i. 29, 152

Puisne, iii. 300

Purchase, i. 303; ii. 410

Purfled, i. 110

Puritan (cant term for a whore), ii. 383

Puritans' ruffs, i. 13

Put-pin, iii. 362

Putry, i. 150

Quelquechose, i. 216

Quiblin, iii. 60

Quote, ii. 364

Ramp, i. 99

Ramsey, Lady, iii. 87

Rariety, iii. 213

Rats of Nilus, iii. 342, 344

Real (= regal), i. 34

Reason (raisin), iii. 154

Rebato, i. 31; iii. 351

Red lattice, i. 86

Reez'd bacon, iii. 322

Remora, iii. 84

Remorse, i. 21, 90

Renowmed, ii. 165

Respective (= respectful), i. 152

Reverent (= reverend), ii. 292; iii. 29, &c.

Rhinoceros' horn, iii. 139

Ribanded ears, ii. 391; iii. 301

_Richard II._, quoted, i. 28; imitation of passage from, iii. 146

_Richard III._, quoted, i. 47, 48; ii. 349; iii. 344

Ride at the ring, i. 214

Riding-wand, iii. 38

Rings with death's head, ii. 16

Ringo-root, iii. 348

Rivels (= wrinkles), i. 243; rivell'd, i. 108; iii. 234

Rivo, ii. 349, 355

Roast beef (a "commodity"), iii. 40

Rochelle churchman, i. 252

Rodio, iii. 267

Room, i. 202, 206

_Romeo and Juliet_ performed at the Curtain Theatre, iii. 373; early popularity of, iii. 140

Rope-maker's son, ii. 153

Rosa solis, ii. 45

Rosemary, iii. 53, 138

Rosicleer, i. 30, 300

Ruff, iii. 182

Ruffled boot, i. 83

Rug-gowns, ii. 395

Rutter, ii. 386

Sacramental wine poisoned, iii. 241

Sad, sadly, sadness, i. 71; iii. 258, 339

St. Agnes' Eve, iii. 141

Salaminian, iii. 261

Say ("take say"), ii. 11

Sconce, i. 236; iii. 84

Scotch barnacle, i. 256; Scotch boot, i. 257; Scotch farthingale, iii. 16

Scots, satirised in _Eastward Ho!_ iii. 64

Seneca quoted, i. 20, 49, 122, 127, 130, 133, 141, 144-5, 149, 174, 237, 265, 304; ii. 109

Servant (= suitor, lover), i. 33; ii. 388

Sest, ii. 374, 402

Sewer, ii. 135

Shakespeare, imitated, i. 28, 47, 48, 224; ii. 23, 143, 218; iii. 133, 134, 137, 146, 215, 219, 230; burlesqued, i. 206; ii. 349; iii. 344

Shaking of the sheets, iii. 165

Shale, ii. 185

Ship of Fools, ii. 122

Shirley, James, iii. 344

Shot-clog, iii. 13

Si quis, ii. 304

_Sick Man's Salve_, iii. 107

Siddow, i. 162

Silver piss-pots, iii. 316

Sink a-pace (cinquepace), iii. 156

Sinking thought, i. 106

Sinklo, the actor, i. 200

Sip a kiss, i. 91

Slatted, i. 281

Sliftred, i. 27

Slip, i. 81, 111

Slop, i. 83

Sluice ("sluiced out his life-blood"), i. 189; iii. 224

Slur, iii. 371

Sly, William, i. 199

Small, ii. 361

Snaphance, iii. 269, 330

Snib, i. 264; ii. 353; iii. 379

Snout-fair, iii. 320

Snurling, i. 186

Soil ("take soil"), i. 254

Soldado, iii. 261, 357

Sometimes, iii. 282

Sophocles' _Antigone_ quoted, i. 128

Souse, i. 279

Southwell, Robert, iii. 281

Spanish blocks, iii. 301

Spanish leather, ii. 7

_Spanish Tragedy_, i. 121, 168; iii. 12, 26, 28

Speak pure fool, i. 85

Speeding-place, ii. 333

Spiders eaten by monkeys, i. 213

Spur-royals, i. 109

Spurs (jingling spurs affected by gallants), i. 233

Squibs running on lines, ii. 121

Stabb'd arms, ii. 70

Stage, custom of gallants to sit (and smoke) on the, i. 199, 200, 206

Stalking-horse, i. 283

Stammel, ii. 387; iii. 14

State (= throne), i. 36; ii. 215

States (= nobles), i. 109, 159, 162

Statist, ii. 262

Statute-staple, iii. 322

Stigmatic, iii. 359

Stock (= stoccata), i. 111, 239

Stockado, iii. 268

Stone-bows, ii. 8

Streak, iii. 323, 355

Stut, ii. 342

Suburbs (bawdy-houses in), i. 317

Suffenus, iii. 306

Surphule, i. 245; iii. 275, 310

Surquedry, i. 50, 147; iii. 267

Switzer, iii. 348

Swound, ii. 93

Sylvester, Joshua, iii. 281

Tacitus, his remarks on prohibited books, ii. 48

Take say, ii. 11

Take the whiff, ii. 353

Take up commodities, ii. 340; iii. 365

_Tamburlaine_, iii. 25

Tanakin, ii. 13

Taw, ii. 376

Tereus, iii. 266

Termagant, iii. 240

There goes but a pair of shears betwixt, i. 290

Thou'st (= thou must), i. 283

Thristing, ii. 413

Thunder, eels roused from the mud by, iii. 347

_Thus while she sleeps I sorrow for her sake_, iii. 14

Thwack a jerkin, ii. 405

Toderers, i. 210

Too too, ii. 328; iii. 313

Totter'd, ii. 373

Touch (= perception), i. 105

Toy to mock an ape withal, iii. 362

Tradesmen's wives used as lures to attract customers, ii. 60; iii. 266, 325

Tragoedia cothurnata, i. 140

Travellers, affected solemnity of, i. 12; iii. 274

Traverse, iii. 394

Trenchmore, iii. 272

Tretably, ii. 358

Trick of twenty, i. 276; ii. 54

Trot the ring, i. 111, 142; iii. 378

Trow (= think you?), iii. 74

Trunk, iii. 31

Trunk-sleeves, ii. 184

Truss my hose, i. 10

Tubrio, iii. 273

Tumbrel, iii. 262, 346

Turnmill Street, ii. 16

Turn-spit dog bound to his wheel, iii. 41

Tweer, i. 71

Twelve-penny room, i. 202

Twinest (= embraces), i. 117

Twopenny ward, iii. 106

Ulysses, his counterfeited madness, iii. 15

Unheal, i. 243

Unnookt simplicity, i. 163

Unpaiz'd, i. 144

Unperegall, ii. 85

Unshale, i. 215

Upbraid, iii. 379

Ure, iii. 312, 329

Vaunt-guard, iii. 261

Vaut, ii. 288

Velure, i. 79

Via, ii. 20, 43, 133

Vie, iii. 84

Vin de monte, ii. 140

Vincentio Saviolo, iii. 373

Violets, bridal-beds strewn with, ii. 373

Virgil imitated, i. 113

Virginia, early settlers in, iii. 63

Virgins, popularly supposed to have the right to save the lives of criminals, iii. 190

Virtue, ii. 247

Vively, ii. 293

Voluntaries, iii. 261

Wall-eyed, iii. 133

Wandering whore, iii. 377

Wards, treatment of, iii. 314

Wedlock (= wife), ii. 143; iii. 47

Weeping Cross, iii. 85

Welshmen's pride in their gentility, i. 258

_Westward Ho!_ comedy of, iii. 5

Westward Ho! (_i.e._, to Tyburn), iii. 27

Wet finger ("with a wet finger"), ii. 189

What could I do withal? ii. 214

When (exclamation of impatience) i. 241; ii. 348, &c.

_When Arthur first in Court began_, i. 240

_When Sampson was a tall young man_, iii. 32

Whiblin, iii. 168

Whiff, take the, ii. 353

_Who calls Jeronimo?_ iii. 12

_Who cries out murther? Lady, was it you?_ iii. 26

Wighy, i. 56

Will (= command), i. 125, ii. 305

Willow garland, ii. 336

Wimble, i. 58

Wisards (wise men), i. 159; iii. 335

With a wanion, iii. 53

Witches turned into cats, ii. 203

Without a man (_i.e._, outside of man's sense), ii. 294

Wolt, i. 27

Wood, ii. 253

Woodstock's work, iii. 276

Woollen caps, ii. 60

Word (= motto), i. 77, 84; iii. 155

Wounds of a murdered man supposed to bleed in the presence of the murderer, iii. 224

Wrapt up in the tail of his mother's smock, ii. 407

Wrinkles, vulgar belief concerning, iii. 135

Writhled, iii. 326

Wrought shirt, i. 79

Xylinum, iii. 288, 342

Yellow, iii. 123

You'st (= you must), i. 310

Zabarella, Giacomo, ii. 363

PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO. EDINBURGH AND LONDON.

Transcriber's Note:

Punctuation was standardized. Variations in spelling were retained, e.g. shipwreck'd, shipwracked, shipwrecked, and Abigail, Abigall, Abigal. Obsolete words, variant spellings, and dialect were not changed. Words and phrases in Greek were transliterated. Prose portions of plays were not wrapped so that line numbers would match the original text.

Words in italics are surrounded by underscores, _like this_. In footnote 509 [)i] indicates a breve and [=i], a macron. Footnotes were renumbered sequentially and moved to follow the scene or section in which the related anchor occurs. There are multiple anchors for Footnotes 24, 193, 250, 260, 261, 292, and 297.

Changes:

Eastward Ho: Footnote [25]: 'otes' to 'notes'

## Act III, Scene II, stage direction after line 25, 'Enetr' to 'Enter'

Added anchor for Footnote [167], missing in the original. Insatiate Countess:

## Act II,Scene 1, added anchor for Footnote [214], missing in the original.

## Act III, Scene 4, added missing word 'I' to the beginning of line 166.

Montebank's Masque: 2 Song, Stanza 3, line 6, 'Bee't' to 'Be 't' Familiar Receipts - For Barrenness, 'mik' to 'milk' Footnote [509], removed 'of' from 'Huc usque of Xylinum'

End of Project Gutenberg's The Works of John Marston, by John Marston