Shakespeare Jest Books Reprints Of The Early And Very Rare Jest
Chapter 8
This word is no doubt the same as the "pribbles and prabbles" which Sir Hugh uses more than once in the _Merry Wives of Windsor_. See act v. sc. 5.
P. 60. _Of hym that payde his dette with crienge bea._--Compare the story of "the subtility of Kindlewall the lawyer repayed with the like craft," printed in _Pasquil's Jests_, ed. Gilbertson, n. d. 40.
P. 65. _All to._--I fear that I too hastily adopted the self-suggested notion that the former words might be read more properly as one word, and in the sense which I indicated. Perhaps as _all to_ or _al to_ is not uncommonly used by early writers in this way, though the meaning in the present case is not particularly clear, it may be better to restore the original reading.
P. 67. _Of the Inholders wyfe and her ii lovers._--See Rowlands' _Knave of Clubbs_, 1600, ed. Rimbault, p. 25.
P. 67. _Daungerous of her tayle._ So in the _Schole-house of Women_, 1542, the author says:--
"Plant them round with many a pin, Ringed for routing of pure golde, Faire without, and foule within, And of their tailes have slipper holde."
P. 70. _Of Mayster Vavasour and Turpin his man._
"A Lawyer and his Clerk riding on the Road, the Clerk desired to know what was the chief Point of the Law. His Master said, if he would promise to pay for their Suppers that Night, he would tell him; which was agreed to. Why then, said the Master, good Witnesses are the chief Point in the Law. When they came to the Inn, the Master bespoke a couple of Fowls for Supper; and when they had Supped, told the Clerk to pay for them according to Agreement. O _Sir_, says he, where's your witness."--_Complete London Jester_, ed. 1771, p. 102.
P. 72. One of _Pasquil's Jests_ is "how mad Coomes, when his wife was drowned, sought her against the stream." It is merely a new application of the present anecdote.
P. 75. _Of the foole that thought hym selfe deed._--A story of a similar character occurs in _The Meeting of Gallants at an Ordinarie, or, the Walkes in Powles_, 1604, (repr. 1841, p. 19), where "mine Host" gives an account of "how a yong fellow was even bespoke and jested to death by harlots."
P. 93. _He fell to a nyce laughyng._
_Nice_, in the sense of _foolish_, is also used by Gower, who likewise employs the substantive _nicete_ in a similar way:--
"But than it were a _nicete_ To telle you, how that I fare!"
_Confessio Amantis_, lib. vi.
Chaucer employs the word in a similar sense very frequently. In the _Cuckoo and the Nightingale_, is the following passage:--
"To telle his might my wit may not suffice, For he can make of wise folks ful nice."
P. 103. Crakers.--See the last edition of Nares, voce _Crake and Craker_. But an earlier example of the use of the word than any given in the Glossary occurs in Lupset's _Works_, 1546, 12mo (_A Compendious Treatise teachying the waie of dying well_, fol. 34 _verso_; this treatise was first printed separately in 1541). In a reprint of the _C. Mery Talys_, which appeared in 1845, the Editor, not knowing what to make of _crake_ and _craker_, altered them, wherever they occurred, to _crack_ and _cracker_ respectively!
P. 113. Ch' adde.--In _Wits Interpreter, The English Parnassus_, by J. Cotgrave. 1655, ed. 1662, p. 247, is "the Devonshire Ditty," from which the following is an extract:--
"Cockbodikins, chil work no more, Dost think chi labour to be poor? No, no, ich chave a do--" &c.
But this phraseology is not peculiar to Devonshire.
P. 113, note 2.--Some additional particulars of interest, relative to ancient wines, may be found in _Morte Arthure_, ed. 1847, pp. 18, 20; and in the _Squyer of Low Degre_ (Ritson's _Ancient Engl. Met. Renancees_, iii).
P. 121. _Of the Courtear that ete the hot costerde._
"An arch Boy being at Table where there was a piping hot Applepye, putting a Bit into his Mouth, burnt it so that the Tears ran down his Cheeks. A Gentleman that sate by, ask'd him, Why he wept? Only said he, because it is just come into my Remembrance that my poor Grandmother died this Day Twelvemonth. Phoo! says the other, is that all? So whipping a large Piece into his Mouth, he quickly sympathized with the Boy; who seeing his Eyes brim-full, with a malicious Sneer Ask'd him, Why he wept? A Pox on you, said he, because you were not hanged, you young Dog, the same Day your Grandmother died."--_Complete London Jester_, ed. 1771, p. 53.
P. 140.--_Of the Canon and his man. Note._
"When King James came into England, coming to Boughton, hee was feasted by Sir Edward Montague, and his six sonnes brought upp the six first dishes; three of them after were lords, and three more knights, Sir Walter Montague, Sir Sydney, and Sir Charles, whose daughter Lady Hatton is."--_Ward's Diary_, ed. Severn, p. 170-1.
P. 143. _For at this foul araye._--So, in the _Child of Bristow_, an early metrical legend, we read:--
"When the burges the child gan se, He seid then, benedicite, Sone, what _araye_ is this?"
Some later writers thought it necessary to use this word with a qualifying adjective, as _shrewd array_, &c. thus, in fact, reducing it to something like its ordinary and modern signification.
P. 148, _note_. 1. See Pepys' _Diary_, 6th ed. I. 29. "They brought me a draft of their drink in a brown bowl, tipt with silver, which I drank off, and at the bottom was a picture of the Virgin with the child in her arms, done in silver."--27th Feb. 1659-60. See also Brydges' _British Bibliographer_, vol. ii. p. 109.
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Transcriber's note:
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