и PRETEND, intend; II. iv. 24. PROBATION; "passed in p. with you,' proved, passing them in detail, one by one; III. i. 80. PROFOUND "having deep or hidden qualities" (Johnson); (?) "deep, and therefore ready to fall" (Clar. Pr.); III. v. 24. PROOF, proved armour; I. ii. 54. PROPER, fine, excellent (used ironically); III. iv. 60. PROTEST, Show publicly, proclaim; V. ii. 11. PURGED, cleansed; III. iv. 76. PURVEYOR, an officer of the king sent before to provide food for the King and his retinue, as the harbinger provided lodging; I. vi. 22. PUSH, attack, onset; V. iii. 20. PUT ON, set on, (?) set to work; IV. iii. 239. PUT UPON, falsely attribute; I. vii. 70. QUARRY, a heap of slaughtered game; RAVELL'D, tangled; II. ii. 37. 28. RAWNESS, hurry; IV. iii. 26. READINESS; manly r.", complete clothing (opposed to "naked frailties "); II. iii. 139. RECEIPT, receptacle; I. vii. 66. RECEIVED, believed; I. vii. 74. RECOIL, Swerve; IV. iii. 19. ; "to r.", for recoiling; V. ii. 23. RELATION, narrative; IV. iii. 173. RELATIONS, "the connection of effects with causes"; III. iv. 124. RELISH, Smack; IV. iii. 95. REMEMBRANCE, quadrisyllabic; III. REQUIRE, ask her to give; III. iv. 6. give rest; IV. iii. 227. RETURN, give back, render; I. vi. 28. RONYON, a term of contempt; I. iii. 6. ROOF'D, gathered under one roof; III. iv. 40. ROOKY, gloomy, foggy; (Jennens, "rocky"); III. ii. 51. ROUND, circlet, crown; I. v. 29. "r. and top of sovereignty," i.e. "the crown, the top or summit of sovereign power"; IV. i. 87. dance in a circle; IV. i. 130. RUBS, hindrances, impediments; III. i. 134. RUMP-FED, well-fed, pampered; I. iii. 6. SAFE TOWARD, with a sure regard to; I. iv. 27. SAG, droop, sink; V. iii. 10. SAINT COLME'S INCH, the island of Columba, now Inchcolm, in the Firth of Forth; I. ii. 61. SAUCY, insolent, importunate; (?) pungent, sharp, gnawing (Koppel); III. iv. 25. SAY TO, tell; I. ii. 6. 'SCAPED, escaped; III. iv. 20. SCARF UP, blindfold; III. ii. 47. SCONE, the ancient coronation place of the kings of Scotland; II. iv. 31. SCOTCH'D, "8 cut with shallow incisions" (Theobald's emendation of Ff., "scorch'd"); III. ii. 13. SEASON, seasoning; III. iv. 141. SEAT, situation; I. vi. 1. SEATED, fixed firmly; I. iii. 136. SECURITY, confidence, consciousness of, security, carelessness; III. v. 32. SEELING, blinding (originally a term of falconry); III. ii. 46. SEEMS; that s to speak things strange," i.e. "whose appearance corresponds with the strangeness of his message" (Clar. Pr.); Johnson conj. "teems"; Collier MS., "comes,' etc.); I. ii. 47. SELF-ABUSE, self-delusion; III. iv. 142. SELF-COMPARISONS, measuring himself with the other; I. ii. 55. SELFSAME, very same; I. iii. 88. SENNET, a set of notes on trumpet or cornet; III. i. 10-11. SE'NNIGHTS, seven nights, weeks; I. iii. 22. SENSIBLE, perceptible, tangible; II. i. 36. SERGEANT (trisyllabic); I. ii. 3. SET FORTH, shewed; I. iv. 6. SETTLED, determined; I. vii. 79. SEWER, one who tasted each dish to prove there was no poison in it; I. vii. (direct.). SHAG EAR'D, having hairy ears; (Steevens conj., adopted by Singer (ed. 2) and Hudson, “shag-hair'd"); IV. ii. 83. SHALL, will; II. i. 29. I shall; IV. ii. 23. SHAME, am ashamed; II. ii. 64. SHARD-BORNE, borne by scaly wingcases; (Davenant, "sharp-brow'd"; Daniel conj. "sharn-bode"; Upton conj. "sharn-born"); III. ii. 42. SHIFT, steal, quietly get; II. iii. 151. SHIPMAN'S CARD, the card of the compass; I. iii. 17. SHOUGH, a kind of shaggy dog; (Ff., "Showghes"; Capell, "shocks"); III. i. 94. SHOULD BE, appear to be; I. iii. 45. SHUT UP, enclosed, enveloped; II. i. 16. SICKEN, be surfeited; IV. i. 60. SIGHTLESS, invisible; I. vii. 23. SIGHTS; Collier MS. and Singer MS. "flights"; Grant White "sprites"; IV. i. 155. SINEL, Macbeth's father, according to Holinshed; I. iii. 71. 32. SINGLE, individual; I. iii. 140. SOMETIME, Sometimes; I. vi. 11. SPEAK, bespeak, proclaim; IV. iii. 159. SPRING, source; I. ii. 27. STAMP, stamped coin; IV. iii. 153. STANCHLESS, insatiable; IV. iii. 78. STAND NOT UPON, do not be particular STATE, chair of State; III. iv. 5. STAY, wait for; IV. iii. 142. 35: "s. and self-abuse," i.e. (?) "my 142. STRANGELY VISITED, afflicted with SUBSTANCES, forms; I. v. 50. 31. SWAY BY, am directed by; V. iii. 9. TAINT, be infected; V. iii. 3. TEMPERANCE, moderation, self-re- TENDING, tendance, attendance; I. v. TEND ON, wait on; I. v. 42. THAT; 66 + to th.", to that end, for that THEREWITHAL, therewith; III. i. 34. -, being borne in mind; III. i. 132. "to gain the t. inn," opportune; TITLES, possessions; IV. ii. 7. -, according to; III. iii. 4. linked with, "prisoner to"; III. TOP, overtop, surpass; IV. iii. 57. v. 43. TOUCH, affection, feeling; IV. ii. 9. TRACE, follow; IV. i. 153. TRAINS, artifices, devices; IV. iii. 118. TRANSPORT, convey; IV. iii. 181. TRIFLED, made trifling, made to sink TUGG'D; "t. with fortune," pulled about in wrestling with fortune; III. i. 112. TWO-FOLD BALLS, probably referring to the double coronation of James, at Scone and Westminster (Clar. Pr.); according to others the reference is to the union of the two islands; IV. i. 121. TYRANNY, usurpation; IV. iii. 67. UNFIX, make to stand on end; I. iii. 135. UNROUGH, beardless; V. ii. 10. UNSPEAK, recall, withdraw; IV. iii. WANT; "cannot w.", can help; III. vi. 8. WARRANTED, justified; IV. iii. 137. WHAT, Who; IV. iii. 49. WHAT IS, i.e. what is the time of; III. iv. 126. WHEN 'TIS, i.e. "when the matter is effected"; II. i. 25. WHETHER (monosyllabic); I. iii. 111. WHILE THEN, till then; III. i. 44. -, on; IV. ii. 32. WITHOUT, Outside; III. iv. 14. -, beyond; III. ii. 11, 12. WITNESS, testimony, evidence; II. ii. Notes. I. i. 1. Perhaps we should follow the punctuation of the Folio, and place a note of interrogation after ' again'. I. ii. 14. damned quarrel'; Johnson's, perhaps unnecessary, emendation of Ff., 'damned quarry' (cp. IV. iii. 206); but Holinshed uses' quarrel' in the corresponding passage. I. ii. 20-21. Many emendations and interpretations have been advanced for this passage; Koppel's explanation (Shakespeare Studien, 1896) is as follows:-" he faced the slave, who never found time for the preliminary formalities of a duel, i.e. shaking hands with and bidding farewell to the opponent "; seemingly, however, which' should have 'he' (ie. Macbeth) and not slave' as its antecedent, 6 I. iii. 15. And the very ports they blow'; Johnson conj. 'various ' for 'very'; Pope reads 'points' for 'ports'; Clar. Press edd. ‘orts ': 'blow''blow upon '. I. iii. 32. 'weird'; Ff., ' weyward' (prob.='weird'); Keightley, 'weyard'. I. iii. 97-98. As thick as hail Game post'; Rowe's emendation; Ff. read' As thick as tale Can post'. I. v. 24-26. The difficulty of these lines arises from the repeated words that which' in line 25, and some editors have consequently placed the inverted commas after undone'; but 'that which' is probably due to the same expression in the previous line, and we should perhaps read and that's which' or ' and that's what'. |