HW HomePrevious CNView CNView TNMView TNINext CN

Line 1663 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1663 Quee. Did you assay him to any pastime?3.1.15
1632- F2
mF2FL20: assay forté, a Seige [sic.], or Assay, the latter of w.ch Words is frequent w.th Shakespear; the King uses it afterwards in this Play,—Help, Angels, make Assay; & before, in a sense w:ch sorts more nearly w.th the Metaphors here us’d, in a speech of Voltimand’s. L.T. [and then squeezed below this, maybe same hand] To give th’assay of armes against—& vid. Henr.V. p. 71. c.2. (p.285 bottom)
1747-60 mbrowne
mBROWNE (c.1747-60) TCC MS 0.12.57
Did you assay him to any pastime?
which might be fitted[?] to the true metre thus.
Did you assay him then to any pastime?
which would connect their Q[ueen] with great propriety, to the sense I have put upon which goes before, and perhaps I corrupt her [. . .] for if not rightly understanding of the passage, which [. . .] would seem impertinent—
1805 seymour
1663-1665 to any pastime...told him] Seymour (1805, p. 174): “More disorder in the metre. Perhaps, the passage ran thus: ‘To any pastime? / Ros. —Please your majesty, / It so fell out, that certain players we / O’er-raught upon the way; of these we told him. / Again, two hemistics within three lines. We might arrange— / To hear and see the matter. / King. —With all my heart; / And much content to see him so inclin’d. / Content is a substantive’.”
1872 cln1
cln1
1663 Clark & Wright (ed. 1872):"Briefly expressed for ’Did you try hi by the test of any pastime?’ "
1663