Page:Love's Labour's Lost (1925) Yale.djvu/77

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Love's Labour's Lost, V. i
65

ACT FIFTH

Scene One

[The King of Navarre's Park]

Enter the Pedant [Holofernes], the Curate [Nathaniel], and Dull.


Hol. Satis quod sufficit.

Nath. I praise God for you, sir: your reasons
at dinner have been sharp and sententious;
pleasant without scurrility, witty without affec- 4
tion, audacious without impudency, learned
without opinion, and strange without heresy. I
did converse this quondam day with a com-
panion of the king's, who is intituled, nomi- 8
nated, or called, Don Adriano de Armado.

Hol. Novi hominem tanquam te: his humour
is lofty, his discourse peremptory, his tongue
filed, his eye ambitious, his gait majestical, and 2
his general behaviour vain, ridiculous, and
thrasonical. He is too picked, too spruce, too
affected, too odd, as it were, too peregrinate, as
I may call it. 16

Nath. A most singular and choice epithet.

Draw out his table-book.

Hol. He draweth out the thread of his verbo-
sity finer than the staple of his argument. I
abhor such fanatical phantasimes, such insoci- 20

1 Satis quod sufficit: Enough is as good as a feast
2 reasons: arguments, discourse
4 affection: affectation
6 opinion: self-conceit
strange: novel, original
10 Novi . . . te: I know the man as well as I know you
12 filed: polished
14 thrasonical: boastful
picked: fastidious
15 peregrinate: traveled, foreign
19 staple: fiber