Your betters have endured me say my mind; Pet. Why thou say'st true; it is a paltry cap, Cath. Love me, or love me not, I like the cap; Pet. Thy gown? why, ay: come, taylor, let's fee 't. [Taylor lays forth the gawn. O, mercy, God! what masking stuff is here! over us: as all eager pursuits, except those of virtue, are alike ridiculous, in the candid and impartial estimation of reafon and philofophy : Another Florio doating on a flower." Young. (15) To a censer, &c ) Cenfers, in barbers shops are now disused, but they may easily be imagined to have been vessels, which, for the emission of the smoke, were cut with great number and variety of interstices. J.-who adds, the taylors trade having an appearance of effeminacy, has always been among the rugged English, liable to farcasms and contempt. Nothing can be more humorously pointed than the following droll description of the taylors, by Petruchio. O monstrous arrogance!-thou ly'st, thou shears, thou thimble, Thou yard, three quarters, half yard, quarter, nail, Away, Hor. I fee, she's like to have neither cap nor gown. Tayl. You bid me make it orderly and well, According to the fashion and the time. Pet. Marry, and did; but, if you be remember'd, I did not bid you mar it to the time. Cath. I never faw a better fashion'd gown, The Mind alone valuable. Pet. Well, come, my Kate; we will unto your father's, Even in these honest mean habiliments; ACT V. SCENEI. A lovely Woman. (16) Fair lovely woman, young and affable, Away, thou rag, thou quantity, thou remnant: More (16) These speeches are found in the first draught of this I More clear of hue, and far more beautiful Cath. Fair, lovely lady, bright and crystalline, With sweet reflections of thy lovely face. SCENE II. Happiness attained. Happily I have arriv'd at last, Unto the wished haven of my blifs. SCENE this play, printed in 1607; they feem evidently to be of S's hand, and well worth preferving; speeches preferred to them, are here subjoined. Such war of white and red within her cheeks! Cath. Young budding virgin fair, and fresh, and fweet, Whither away; or where is thy abode? An attentive reader, Steevens thinks, will perceive in the speech in the text several words which are employed in none of the legitimate plays of S. whence he concludes, that the first draught, as it is called, was not the work of S. SCENE III. Others measured by ourselves. He that (17) is giddy thinks the world turns round. Greyhound. O Sir, Lucentio flipt me for his greyhound, Which runs himself, and catches for his master. Wife's Submisssion. Marry, (18) peace it bodes, and love, and quiet life, And awful rule, and right fupremacy; And, to be short, what not, that's sweet and happy. The Wife's Duty to her Husband. Fie! fie! unknit that threat'ning, unkind brow, A woman mov'd, is like a fountain troubled, Will deign to fip or touch one drop of it. Thy husband (19) is thy lord, thy life, thy keeper, / Thy (17) He that, &c.] The widow explains her meaning in this general observation, by saying afterwards, Your husband being troubled with a shrew, Meafures my husband's forrow by his woe: And now you know my meaning. (18) Marry, &c.] Petruchio says this on Hortenfio's wondering, what Catherine's fubmiffion might bode. (19) Thy husband, &c.] Leave not the faithful fide That gave thee being, still shades thee and protects. The wife, where danger or dishonour lurks, Safeft Thy head, thy fovereign; one that cares for thee, Safest and seemliest by her husband stays, And a little before he says, Too Adam in Par. Loft, B. 9. 263. Nothing lovelier can be found, In woman, than to fludy houshold good, And good works in her husband to promote. (20) And craves, &c.] Statius, speaking of a good wife, in the 5th book of his Silva, fays, -Mallet paupertate pudica Intemerata mori, vitamque impendere fama: She'd rather chuse, 'midst poverty and shame, Chaste, with good-humour, with referv'dness, free, In the Amphitrion of Plautus (Act 2. Sc. 2.) Alcmena speaks thus: What the world calls a portion with a wife Anony. See p. 30. |