Page:Romeo and Juliet (Dowden).djvu/200

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156
ROMEO AND JULIET
[ACT IV.
Peter. Then will I lay the serving-creature's dagger115
on your pate. I will carry no crotchets:[E 1] I'll
re you, I'll fa you.[E 2] Do you note me?
First Mus. An[C 1] you re us and fa us, you
note us.
Second Mus. Pray you, put up your dagger, and120
put out your wit.
Peter. Then have at you[E 3] with my wit![C 2] I will dry-
beat[E 4] you with an iron wit, and put up my iron
dagger. Answer me like men:
When griping grief[C 3][E 5] the heart doth wound,125
And doleful dumps the mind oppress,[C 4]
Then music with her silver sound[C 5]
why "silver sound"? why "music with her
silver sound"?—What say you, Simon
Catling?[E 6]130
First Mus.[C 6] Marry, sir, because silver hath a sweet
sound.
  1. 118. An] Pope; And Q, F.
  2. 122. Then … wit] continued to Sec. Mus. Q, F; as here Q 4.
  3. 125. grief] Q 1; griefes Q, F.
  4. 126. And … oppress] Q 1; omitted Q, F.
  5. 125–127. When … sound] verse Q 1; prose Q, F.
  6. 131. First Mus.] 1 Q 1, Minst. Q, Mu. F.
  1. 116. crotchets] I will bear none of your whims; the same play on the words crotchets and note occurs in Much Ado, II. iii. 58, 59.
  2. 116, 117. I'll re you, I'llfa you] It is possible that (as Ulrici thinks) quibbles are continued here. Ray meant to befoul; compare Taming of the Shrew, IV. i. 3: "Was ever man so beaten? was ever man so rayed?" Fay meant to cleanse, as in Burton, Anat. of Melancholy: "To … fay channels." See New Eng. Dict. for other examples; and compare the phrase "to dust one's coat." The processes of befouling and cleansing might both be accomplished by a "dry-beating." But probably no quibble is intended.
  3. 122. have at you] Peter takes put out not as meant, i.e. extinguish, but as the opposite of put up (your dagger), and so draw, unsheathe.
  4. 122, 123. dry-beat] See [[../../Act 3/Scene 1|III. i. 82]], note.
  5. 125. When griping grief] From a poem by Richard Edwards in the Paradise of Daintie Devices. See also the poem as given in Percy's Reliques.
  6. 130. Catling] A small lute or fiddle string of catgut, as in Troilus and Cressida, III. iii. 306.