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Line 1474-7 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 1018-2022 ed. Eric Rasmussen
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
1474-5 weele en | to’t like {friendly Fankners} <French Faulconers>, fly at any thing we see,  
1475-7 weele | haue a speech straite, come giue vs a tast of your qua|lity,
1723 pope1
pope1
PMN: “Ff variant French”
1765 john1
john1
1475 friendly Fankners] Johnson (ed. 1765): “Hanmer, who has much illustrated the allusions to falconry, reads, like French falconers, but gives no reason for the correction.”
1773 v1773
v1773 = JOHN1 [minus ’but . . . correction’] +
1475 friendly Fankners] STEEVENS (ed. 1773):“French Falconers is not a correction by Hanmer, but the reading of the first folio.”
1773 jen
jen
1475 Fankners] Jennens (ed. 1773): “The fo’s, R. and H. French faulconers; but J. (who seems not to have met with this reading any where but in H. although he tells us he has the third f.) wonders that H. should give no reason for this correction, as he calls it, Qu’s. faukners.”
1774-79? capn
capn
1475 friendly Fankners] Capell (1779-83 [1774] 1:133):“The epithet in the quarto’s is– ‘friendly,’ a mistake of the printer’s; for if the context be look’d into, friendly will be found an absurdity, and cadence declares against it besides: the French are remarkably irregular in all feats of sporting, even at this day.”
1778 v1778
v1778: = v1773 +
1475 friendly Fankners] Steevens (ed. 1778): “The amusement of falconry was much cultivated in France. In All’s Well That Ends Well, Shakespear has introduced an astringer or falconer at the French court. Mr. Tollet, who has mentioned the same circumstance, likewise adds that it is said in Sir Tho. Browne’s Tracts, p. 116. that ‘the French seem to have been the first and noblest falconers in the western part of Europe;’ and, that the French king sent over his falconers to shew that sport to King James the first.’ See Weldon’s Court of King James.”
mal = v1778+
1475 friendly Fankners] Malone (ed. 1790): “like French falconers,] Thus the folio. Quarto: --like friendly falconers.”
1791- rann
rann
1476-7 quality;] Rann (ed. 1791-): “—profession.”
1793 v1793
v1793 = MAL
1803 v1803
v1803 = v1793
1813 v1813
v1813 = v1803
1843 col1
col1
1474-5 Collier (ed. 1843): “So the folio, and so, no doubt, rightly, as ‘French’ is the word in the quarto, 1603, although in all the later quartaos it is friendly. ‘How well (observes the Rev. Mr. Barry) this expresses what the French callLa Chasse, the pursuit of trifling birds.’”
1872 cln1
cln1
1477 passionate] Clark & Wright (ed. 1872): “full of feeling. Compare King John, ii. 1. 544: ’She is sad and passionate at your highness’ tent.’ And Two Gentlemen of Verona, iv. 4. 172: ’Madam, ’twas Ariadne passioning For Theseus’ perjury.’ "
1877 clns
clns
1475 friendly Fankners] Neil (ed. 1877): “French falconers — with zest, like keen sportsmen.”
1881 hud2
hud2
1474-5 Hudson (ed. 1881): “From this it would seem that the English custom in falconry was, first to let off some bird into the air, and then to fly the hawk after it; the French, to fly the hawk at any bird that might happen to be within ken.”
1885 macd
macd
1474-5 MacDonald (ed. 1885): “—like French sportsmen of the present day too.”
1899 ard1
ard1
French falconers] Dowden (ed. 1899): “‘It was the fashion of our ancestors to sneer at the French as falconers. They did not regard the rigour of the game, but condescended to any quarry that came in their way’ (D.H. Madden, The Diary of Master William Silence, p. 146).”
1476 quality] Dowden (ed. 1899): “see line [1393].”
1934a cam3
cam3
1474-5 Wilson (ed. 1934): “The French were the master--falconers of the age. Turbervile’s Booke of Faulconrie (1575), the best Eliz. book on th subject, was admittedly drawn from French sources, while Sir T. Browne, writing Of Hawks and Falconry in 1684, declares that ‘the French Artists...seem, to have been the first and noblest Falconers in the Western part of Europe,’ and relates how one of his favourite authors, Julius Scaliger, ‘an expert Falconer,’ saw a gerfalcon of Henry of Navarre in one day ‘strike down a Buzzard, two wild Geese, divers Kites, a Crane and a Swan’ (Sayle, Works of Sir T. Browne, iii. 297, 299). It is prob. that Southampton, Shakespeare’s patron, and the friend of the Earl of Essex who had served with Navarre, knew all about the exploits of this gerfalcon. Madden wrongly interprets Ham.’s words as sneer at the French.”
1474 1475 1476 1477