292
NOTES AND QUERIES.
[12 8. IV. Nov. ,1918,
K. d.
10
For an edgg at the bottom & a pockett
For silke for it . . . . . . . .
For making the peticoate of silver stuff
For ribbone for it . . . . . .
For fine buckeram& an eddg & a pockett
For silke for it . . . . . . . .
For making her scarlett coote . . . .
For satten for the stave & stiffening
for the wings & pocketfc . . . . 1 10 For bordring ribbons, callicoe, &
claspes . . . . . . . . 020
For silke for it 026
For a paire of bene sleeves . . . . 0100
For a ground role & a petticat role . . 064
For a paire of silke bodyes . . . . 090
For making her petticoate of scarlett
beays . . . . . . . . 016
For bordering & ribbone & silke & a
pockett 020
For 8 yards & a qrt. of scarlet beayes
to make the coate & peticoate,
7s. Qd. the yard 320
For a knyfe wth a bludd stone haft . .
For x yardes & a halfe of faune
coullered wrought grogran at 16 the
yard . . . . . . . . . .
For an ell & a quarter of taffate . . For 8 ouzence and a quarter of
partchmt. plate lace . . . .
For 20 dozen of small buttons at 8s.
a dozen .. .. . . ..
For 3 dozehan 9 yards of bardsey satten
chenie at 3s. ......
For 3 ouz. 3 quarters of tauney ..
For di an ouz. of silke . . . . . .
For o yardes of tauey ribbin ingraine
at Qd. ........
For 2 yardes & a halfe of id. ribbin .. For one yard of galloone . . . .
For cullered silkes . . . . . .
For lace for her of seeverall sortes . . For 6 yardes of Copwell laune . . ..
13
12
50
146
16 8
226
13 4
113
11 13
26
010
04
119
15 3
12
16 01
13 12
149 10
179 03 8
On another loose sheet, probably in reference to the same occasion, is the following :
A note of the goods that came amongst the furni- ture of the red and white Tufftafity bed. Three peecys of valence for a bed of needle worke
of diverse coulers.
A carpet of needle worke of diverse coulers. A tale for a sweete bag of needleworke of diverse
coulers, being the story of Solomon and the
2 Harlot ts. A peece of needleworke lind with blew callico,
being our Saviour's crucifixion, lying in his
tomb, and his resurrection. A peece of Indian stuffe of severall coulers, being
a bed quilt lind with red callico. A sattin quilt of severall coulers. A large mantle for a bed, being of cloath of silver
& lind with yellow taffaty, with 4 tallits of
silke & silver.
J. HARVEY BLOOM.
THOMAS HE YWOOD AXD 'THE
FAIR MAID OF THE EXCHANGE.'
(See ante, p. 261.)
EQTTAULY clear indications of Heywood are to be found in the text of the play. The notable words are these : associate (v.), com- pendious, exigent (n.), fluence, lackey (v.), immure, perplexion, quittance (v.). It will be best to take them in the order of their occurrence.
P. 7, associate, v. = accompany.
And we not present to associate you. Used once in this sense by Shakespeare. Common in Heywood. Compare ' If You Know not Me,' 2*97 :
Thither, so please you, we'll associate you. Occurs again in ' The Brazen Age,' 181 ^ ' Iron Age,' 330 ; ' Lucrece,' 175, 203 ; and elsewhere.
P. 11, lackey, v.
Bawdier. Will you get up and ride ? Mall. No, I'll lackey by his side.
In ' The Brazen Age,' 178 :
I'll lackey by thee wheresoe'er thou goest. Also ' 1 Edward IV.,' 16 ;' Love's Mistress,*" 110.
P. 13, immure.
. . . .the depth of grief That is immur'd within my heart's deep closet.
One of the commonest of Hey wood's many Latinisms, especially in its literal sense. For its metaphorical application, as here,, compare ' The Brazen Age,' 212 :
Immur'd with death.
The word occurs no fewer than six times in. ' The Brazen Age.'
P. 32, perplexion.
The true perplexion of her wounded heart. Again in ' The Golden Age,' 40.
P. 56, fluence.
The natural fluence of my own wit had been- far better.
Compare ' Royal King and Loyal Subject,' 71 :
1 have lost my spirit And fluence of my brain.
The earliest authority for this word in ' N.E.D.' is this passage from ' The Fair Maid of the Exchange.' Chapman uses it a little later, but then only in the primary sense of " stream." The only other citation, in the Dictionary is from Wood's ' Athenae Oxonienses,' " fluence in discourse " not a- parallel use.