BAST. How the young whelp of Talbot's, ragingwood", Did flesh his puny sword in Frenchmen's blood"! So, rushing in the bowels of the French', BUR. Doubtless, he would have made a noble knight: See, where he lies inhersed in the arms BAST. Hew them to pieces, hack their bones asunder; Whose life was England's glory, Gallia's wonder. CHAR. O, no; forbear: for that which we have fled. During the life, let us not wrong it dead. 7-raging-wooD,] That is, raging mad. So, in Heywood's Dialogues, containing a number of effectual Proverbs, 1562: "She was, as they say, horn-wood." Again, in The Longer thou livest the more Fool thou art, 1570: "He will fight as he were wood." STEEVENS. — in Frenchman's blood!] The return of rhyme where young Talbot is again mentioned, and in no other place, strengthens the suspicion that these verses were originally part of some other work, and were copied here only to save the trouble of composing new. JOHNSON. 9-of a GIGLOT wench:] Giglot is a wanton, or a strumpet. JOHNSON. The word is used by Gascoigne and other authors, though now quite obsolete. So, in the play of Orlando Furioso, 1594: "Whose choice is like that Greekish giglot's love, See vol. ix. p. 197, n. 7. STEEvens. - in the bowels of the French,] So, in the first part of Jeronimo, 1605: Meet, Don Andrea! yes, in the battle's bowels." STEEVENS. Enter Sir WILLIAM LUCY, attended; a French LUCY. Herald, Conduct me to the Dauphin's tent; to know 2 CHAR. On what submissive message art thou sent ? Lucy. Submission, Dauphin? 'tis a mere French word; We English warriors wot not what it means. CHAR. For prisoners, ask'st thou? hell our prison But tell me whom thou seek'st. Lucy. Where is the great Alcides of the field, Valiant lord Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury? Created, for his rare success in arms, Great earl of Washford, Waterford, and Valence; 2 Herald, Conduct me to the Dauphin's tent; to know Who hath obtain'd-] Lucy's message implied that he knew who had obtained the victory: therefore Sir T. Hanmer reads: "Herald, conduct me to the Dauphin's tent." JOHNSON. 3 Where is the great Alcides-] Old copy-But where's. Corrected by Mr. Rowe. The compositor probably caught the word but from the preceding line. MALONE. * Great earl of WASHFORD,] It appears from Camden's Britannia and Holinshed's Chronicle of Ireland, that Wexford was anciently called Weysford. In Crompton's Mansion of Magnanimitie it is written as here, Washford. This long list of titles is taken from the epitaph formerly fixed on Lord Talbot's tomb in Roüen in Normandy. Where this author found it, I have not been able to ascertain, for it is not in the common historians. The oldest book in which I have met with it is the tract above mentioned, which was printed in 1599, posterior to the date of this play. Numerous as this list is, the epitaph has one more, which, I suppose, was only rejected because it would not easily fall into "Lord Lovetoft of Worsop." It concludes as here, "Lord Falconbridge, Knight of the noble order of St. George, the verse, Lord Talbot of Goodrig and Urchinfield, Lord Strange of Blackmere, lord Verdun of Alton, Lord Cromwell of Wingfield, lord Furnival of Sheffield, The thrice victorious lord of Falconbridge; Of all his wars within the realm of France ? Him, that thou magnifiest with all these titles, LUCY. Is Talbot slain; the Frenchmen's only Scourge, Your kingdom's terrour and black Nemesis? Puc. I think, this upstart is old Talbot's ghost, He speaks with such a proud commanding spirit. St. Michael, and the golden fleece, Great Marshall to King Henry VI. of his realm in France, who died in the battle of Bourdeaux, 1453." MALONE. The Turk, &c.] Alluding probably to the ostentatious letter of Sultan Solyman the Magnificent, to the Emperor Ferdinand, 1562; in which all the Grand Seignor's titles are enumerated. See Knolles's History of the Turks, 5th edit. p. 789. GREY. 6 amaze i. e. (as in other instances) confound, throw into consternation. So, in Cymbeline : For God's sake, let him have 'em'; to keep them here, They would but stink, and putrefy the air. CHAR. GO, take their bodies hence, LUCY. I'll bear them hence: But from their ashes shall be rear'd 8 A phoenix that shall make all France afeard. thou wilt 9. And now to Paris, in this conquering vein ; [Exeunt. ACT V. SCENE I.1 London. A Room in the Palace. Enter King HENRY, GLOSTER, and EXETER. K. HEN. Have you perus'd the letters from the pope, let him have 'EM ;] Old copy-have him. So, a little lower,-do with him. The first emendation was made by Mr. Theobald; the other by the editor of the second folio. MALONE, 8 But from their ashes shall be rear'd A phoenix, &c.] The defect in the metre shows that some word of two syllables was inadvertently omitted; probably an epithet to ashes. MALONE. So, in the Third Part of this play: "My ashes, as the phoenix, shall bring forth Sir Thomas Hanmer, with great probability, reads: "But from their ashes, Dauphin," &c. STEEVENS. 9 So we be rid of them, do WITH 'EM what thou wilt.] I suppose, for the sake of metre, the useless words—with 'em should be omitted. STEEVENS. 1 Act V. Scene 1.] In the original copy, the transcriber or The emperor, and the earl of Armagnac ? To have a godly peace concluded of, Between the realms of England and of France. K. HEN. How doth your grace affect their motion ? GLO. Well, my good lord; and as the only means To stop effusion of our Christian blood, And 'stablish quietness on every side. K. HEN. Ay, marry, uncle; for I always thought, It was both impious and unnatural, 2 That such immanity2 and bloody strife Should reign among professors of one faith. The earl of Armagnac-near knit to Charles, In marriage, with a large and sumptuous dowry. And fitter is my study and my books, printer forgot to mark the commencement of the fifth Act; and has by mistake called this scene, Scene II. The editor of the second folio made a very absurd regulation by making the Act begin in the middle of the preceding scene, (where the Dauphin, &c. enter, and take notice of the dead bodies of Talbot and his son,) which was inadvertently followed in subsequent editions. MALONE. immanity] i. e. barbarity, savageness. STEEVENS. 3- my years are young;] His majesty, however, was twentyfour years old. MALONE. |