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NORTH. Come, come, go in with me: 'tis with my mind,

As with the tide fwell'd up unto its height,
That makes a still-stand, running neither way.
Fain would I go to meet the archbishop,
But many thoufand reafons hold me back :-
I will refolve for Scotland; there am I,
Till time and vantage crave my company. [Exeunt.

SCENE IV.

London. A Room in the Boar's Head Tavern, in Eaftcheap.

Enter Two Drawers.

1 DRAW. What the devil haft thou brought there? apple-Johns? thou know'ft, fir John cannot endure an apple-John.4

2 DRAW. Mafs, thou fayeft true: The prince once fet a dish of apple-Johns before him, and told him, there were five more fir Johns: and, putting off his

an apple-John.] So, in The Ball, by Chapman and Shirley, 1639:

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thy man, Apple-John, that looks

"As he had been a fennight in the straw,

"A ripening for the market."

This apple will keep two years, but becomes very wrinkled and fhrivelled. It is called by the French, Deux-ans. Thus, Cogan, in his Haven of Health, 1595: "The best apples that we have in England are pepins, deufants, costards, darlings, and fuch other." Again, among inftructions given in the year 1580 to fome of our navigators, "for banketting on fhipboard perfons of credite," we meet with " the apple John that dureth two yeares, to make fhew of our fruits." See Hackluyt, Vol. I. P. 441. STEEVENS.

hat, faid, I will now take my leave of thefe fix dry, round, old, withered knights. It angered him to the heart; but he hath forgot that.

1 DRAW. Why then, cover, and set them down: And fee if thou canft find out Sneak's noife; 5 miftrefs Tear-fheet would fain hear fome mufick. Defpatch: 6-The room where they supped, is too hot; they'll come in straight.

2 DRAW. Sirrah, here will be the prince, and master Poins anon: and they will put on two of our

S Sneak's noife;] Sneak was a street minstrel, and therefore the drawer goes out to liften if he can hear him in the neighbourhood. JOHNSON.

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A noife of musicians anciently fignified a concert or company of them. In the old play of Henry V. (not that of Shakspeare) there is this paffage: -there came the young prince, and two or three more of his companions, and called for wine good ftore, and then they fent for a noyfe of mufitians," &c.

Falftaff addreffes them as a company in another scene of this play. So again, in Weftward Hoe, by Decker and Webster, 1607: "All the noise that went with him, poor fellows, have had their fiddle-cafes pulled over their ears.'

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Again, in The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, a comedy, printed 1598, the Count fays: "O that we had a noise of muficians, to play to this antick as we go."

Heywood, in his Iron Age, 1632, has taken two expreffions from these plays of Henry IV. and put them into the mouth of Therfites addreffing himself to Achilles :

"Where's this great sword and buckler man of Greece? "We shall have him in one of Sneak's noife,

"And come peaking into the tents of the Greeks,

"With, will you have any mufick, gentlemen ?"

Among Ben Jonfon's Leges convivales is

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Fidicen, nifi accerfitus, non venito."

STEEVENS.

Defpatch: &c.] This period is from the first edition.

POPE.

Thefe words, which are not in the folio, are in the quarto given to the fecond drawer. Mr. Pope rightly attributed them to the firft. MALONE.

jerkins, and aprons; and fir John muft not know of it: Bardolph hath brought word.

1 DRAW. By the mafs, here will be old utis:" It will be an excellent ftratagem.

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2 DRAW. I'll fee, if I can find out Sneak. [Exit.

Enter Hoftefs and DOLL TEAR-SHEET.

HOST. I'faith, sweet heart, methinks now you are in an excellent good temperality: your pulfidge

7 here will be old utis :] Utis, an old word yet in use in fome counties, fignifying a merry festival, from the French huit, octo, ab. A. S. Eahra, Octavæ fefti alicujus.-Skinner.

POPE.

Skinner's explanation of utis (or utas) may be confirmed by the following paffage from T. M.'s Life of Sir Thomas More:

-to-morrow is St. Thomas of Canterbury's eeve, and the utas of St. Peter-." The eve of Thomas à Becket, according to the new stile, happens on the 6th of July, and St. Peter's day on the 29th of June.

Again, in Contention between Liberality and Prodigality, a comedy, 1602 :

"Then if you please, with some royfting harmony,

"Let us begin the utas of our iollitie." HENLEY.

Old, in this place, does not mean ancient, but was formerly a common augmentative in colloquial language. Old Utis fignifies feftivity in a great degree.

So, in Lingua, 1607:

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there's old moving among them."

Again, in Decker's comedy, called, If this be not a good Play the Devil is in it, 1612:

"We shall have old breaking of necks then."

Again, in Soliman and Perfeda, 1599:

"I fhall have old laughing."

Again, in Arden of Feverfham, 1592:

"Here will be old filching, when the prefs comes out of Paul's." STEEVENS.

See Vol. IX. p. 104, n. 4. MALONE.

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beats as extraordinarily as heart would defire; and your colour, I warrant you, is as red as any rofe: But, i'faith, you have drunk too much canaries and that's a marvellous fearching wine, and it perfumes the blood9 ere one can fay,-What's this? How do you now?

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HOST. Why, that's well faid; a good heart's worth Look, here comes fir John.

gold.

Enter FALSTAFF, finging.

FAL. When Arthur first in court-Empty the jordan. And was a worthy king: [Exit Drawer.] How now, mistress Doll?

--

2

HOST. Sick of a calm: yea, good footh.

8 your pulfidge beats &c.] One would almoft regard this fpeech as a burlefque on the following paffage in the interlude called The Repentance of Mary Magdalene, 1567. Infidelity fays to Mary:

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"Let me fele your poulfes, miftreffe Mary, be you ficke?
"By my troth in as good tempre as any woman can be :
"Your vaines are as full of blood, lufty and quicke,
"In better taking truly I did you never fee."

STEEVENS.

a marvellous fearching wine, and it perfumes the blood-] The fame phrafeology is feriously used by Arthur Hall, in his tranflation of the first Iliad, 4°. 1581:

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1 When Arthur first in court-] The entire ballad is published in the first volume of Dr. Percy's Reliques of ancient English Poetry. STEEVENS.

The words in the ballad are

"When Arthur firft in court began,

"And was approved king." MALONE.

- Sick of a calm:] I fuppofe fhe means to fay of a qualm.

STEEVENS.

FAL. So is all her fect; 3 an they be once in a calm, they are fick.

DOL. You muddy rascal, is that all the comfort you give me ?

FAL. You make fat rascals,+ mistress Doll.

3 So is all her fect;] I know not why fect is printed in all the copies; I believe fer is meant. JOHNSON.

Sect is, I believe, right.

Falstaff may mean all of her profeffion. In Mother Bombie, a comedy, 1594, the word is frequently used:

"Sil. I am none of that sect.

"Can. Thy loving fect is an ancient fect, and an honourable," &c.

Since the foregoing quotation was given, I have found fect fo often printed for fex in the old plays, that I fuppofe these words were anciently fynonymous. Thus, in Marfton's Infatiate Countess, 1613:

"Deceives our fect of fame and chastity." Again, in Beaumont and Fletcher's Valentinian :

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Modefty was made

"When she was firft intended: when she blushes
"It is the holieft thing to look upon,

"The pureft temple of her fect, that ever

"Made nature a blest founder."

Again, in Whetstone's Arbour of Vertue, 1576:

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Who, for that these barons fo wrought a flaunder to her fect,

"Their foolish, rafh, and judgment falfe, fhe sharplie did detect." STEEVENS.

In Middleton's Mad World my Mafters, 1608, (as Dr. Farmer has elsewhere observed,) a courtezan fays, "it is the easiest art and cunning for our fect to counterfeit sick, that are always full of fits, when we are well," I have therefore no doubt that fect was licentiously used by our author, and his contemporaries, for fex. MALONE.

I believe fect is here used in its usual fenfe, and not for fer. Falstaff means to fay, that all courtexans, when their trade is at a ftand, are apt to be fick. DOUCE.

4 You make fat rafcals,] Falstaff alludes to a phrase of the foreft. Lean deer are called rafcal deer. He tells her fhe calls him wrong, being fat he cannot be a rafcal. JoHNSON.

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