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Line 2942 - Commentary Note (CN) More Information

Notes for lines 2023-2950 ed. Frank N. Clary
For explanation of sigla, such as jen, see the editions bib.
2942 And wil {a} <he> not come againe,4.5.191
1982 ard2
ard2: xrefs.; Chappell (for Merry Milkmaids’ analogue), Eastward Ho burlesque
2942-8 Jenkins (ed. 1982): “ln. The change of tone comes so abruptly upon the love-song of [4.5.187 (2938)] that, although this lyric reveals itself [4.5.195 (2945-6)] as a dirge for an old man, it will almost inevitably strike us also as a lament for the lost lover. Cf. [4.5.23 (2769)] ln. The usual tune derives from the Drury Lane tradition recorded by Linley and Chappell. Unlike those for the songs at [4.5.23ff. (2769ff.)], [4.5.48ff. (2790ff.)], [4.5.187 (2938)], it cannot be traced back to Shakespeare’s time, but Chappell (i.237) notes that ‘it appears to be a portion of the tune entitled The Merry Milkmaids’ in Playford’s English Dancing Master, 1651 (in which see p. 31), and associated with ‘several ballads’. There is a burlesque of this song in Eastward Ho (iii.ii).”
2942