Page:Romeo and Juliet (Dowden).djvu/119

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
SC. IV.]
ROMEO AND JULIET
75
Rom. Here's goodly gear![E 1]

Enter Nurse and Peter.[C 1]

Mer. A sail, a sail![C 2]110
Ben.[C 3][E 2] Two, two; a shirt and a smock.
Nurse. Peter![C 4]
Peter. Anon?[C 5]
Nurse. My fan,[E 3] Peter.
Mer. Good Peter, to hide her face;[C 6] for her fan's115
the fairer of the two.[C 7]
Nurse. God ye[E 4] good morrow, gentlemen.
Mer. God ye good den, fair gentlewoman.
Nurse. Is it good den?
Mer. 'Tis no less, I tell you;[C 8] for the bawdy hand120
of the dial is now upon the prick of noon.[E 5]
Nurse. Out upon you! what a man are you!
Rom. One, gentlewoman, that God hath made for
himself[C 9] to mar.
  1. 109. Enter …] Enter Nurse and her man Q, F (after longer, 108).
  2. 110. A sail, a sail] Q, F (but continued to Romeo); A sail, a sail, a sail. Q1 (given to Mercutio).
  3. 111. Ben.] Q1; Mer. Q, F.
  4. 112–115. Peter! … Peter] Q, F; Peter, pree thee give me my fan. Mer. Pree thee doo good Peter, Q1.
  5. 113. Anon?] Theobald; Anon. Q, F.
  6. 115. face;] F3, face, Q, face? F.
  7. 116. fairer … two] Q1, fairer face. Q, fairer face? F.
  8. 120. you] F, yee Q.
  9. 123, 124. for himself] Q1; himself Q, F.
  1. 109. gear] Gear is used for talk, and, in a depreciatory sense, rubbishy talk; also for stuff, and, in a depreciatory sense, rubbish. It is also used for apparel, attire. Probably Romeo refers to the preceding talk, not to the habiliments of the approaching nurse.
  2. 111. Ben.] Benvolio, slow to kindle, is caught into the fire of fun; see line 138. But some editors accept the arrangement of speeches in Q, F.
  3. 114. fan] Compare Love's Labour's Lost, iv. i. 147: "To see him walk before a lady and to bear her fan!" Farmer quotes The Serving Man's Comfort, 1598: "The mistress must have one to carry her cloake and hood, another her fanne."
  4. 117. God ye] short for God give ye; on good den, see [[../../Act 1/Scene 2|I. ii. 57.]]
  5. 121. prick of noon] point or mark of noon; so "noontide prick," 3 Henry VI. i. iv. 34, and Lucrece, line 781.