: Enter a Servant. SERV. The four strangers seek for you, madam, to take their leave: and there is a fore-runner come from a fifth, the prince of Morocco; who brings word, the prince, his master, will be here to-night. POR. If I could bid the fifth welcome with so good heart as I can bid the other four farewell, I should be glad of his approach: if he have the condition of a saint, and the complexion of a devil, I had rather he should shrive me than wive me. Come, Nerissa. Sirrah, go before. - Whiles we shut the gate upon one wooer, another knocks at the door. [Exeunt. : SCENE III. Venice. A publick Place. Enter BASSANIO and SHYLOCK. SHY. Three thousand ducats, well. BASS. Ay, sir, for three months. SHY. For three months,-well. BASS. For the which, as I told you, Antonio shall be bound. SHY. Antonio shall become bound, well. BASS. May you stead me? Will you pleasure me? Shall I know your answer? SHY. Three thousand ducats, for three months, and Antonio bound. 5 the condition-] i. e. the temper, qualities. So, in Othello: "-and then, of so gentle a condition!" MALONE. BASS. Your answer to that. SHY. Antonio is a good man. BASS. Have you heard any imputation to the contrary? SHY. Ho, no, no, no, no ;-my meaning, in saying he is a good man, is to have you understand me, that he is sufficient: yet his means are in supposi. tion: he hath an argosy bound to Tripolis, another to the Indies; I understand moreover upon the Rialto, he hath a third at Mexico, a fourth for England, and other ventures he hath, squander'd abroad: But ships are but boards, sailors but men: there be land-rats, and water-rats, water-thieves, and land-thieves; I mean, pirates; and then, there. is the peril of waters, winds, and rocks: The man is, notwithstanding, sufficient;-three thousand ducats;-I think, I may take his bond. BASS. Be assured you may. SHY. I will be assured, I may; and, that I may be assured, I will bethink me: May I speak with Antonio ? Bass. If it please you to dine with us. SHY. Yes, to smell pork; to eat of the habitation which your prophet, the Nazarite, conjured the devil into: I will buy with you, sell with you, talk with you, walk with you, and so following; but I will not eat with you, drink with you, nor pray with you. What news on the Rialto?-Who is he comes here? -the habitation which your prophet, the Nazarite, conjured the devil into:] Perhaps there is no character through all Shakspeare, drawn with more spirit, and just discrimination, than Shylock's. His language, allusions, and ideas, are every where so appropriate to a Jew, that Shylock might be exhibited for an exemplar of that peculiar people. HENLEY. Enter ANTONIO. Bass. This is signior Antonio. SHY. [Aside.] How like a fawning publican he looks! I hate him for he is a christian : But more, for that, in low simplicity, I will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him. BASS. Shylock, do you hear? SHY. I am debating of my present store; Your worship was the last man in our mouths. * If I can catch him once upon the hip,] This, Dr. Johnson observes, is a phrase taken from the practice of wrestlers; and (he might have added) is an allusion to the angel's thus laying hold on Jacob when he wrestled with him. See Gen. xxxii. 24, &c. HENLEY. 8 the ripe wants of my friend,] Ripe wants are wants I'll break a custom :-Is he yet possess'd, SHY. Ay, ay, three thousand ducats. ANT. And for three months. SHY. I had forgot, -three months, you told me so. Well then, your bond; and, let me see, hear you; But Methought, you said, you neither lend, nor borrow, Upon advantage. ANT. I do never use it. SHY. When Jacob graz'd his uncle Laban's sheep, This Jacob from our holy Abraham was (As his wise mother wrought in his behalf,) The third possessor; ay, he was the third. ANT. And what of him? did he take interest? SHY. No, not take interest; not, as you would say, Directly interest: mark what Jacob did. come to the height, wants that can have no longer delay. Perhaps we might read-rife wants, wants that come thick upon him. JOHNSON. Ripe is, I believe, the true reading. So, afterwards: " Here is a brief how many sports are ripe." STEEVENS? -possess'd,] i. e. acquainted, informed. So, in Twelfth Night: "Possess us, possess us, tell us something of him." STEEVENS, -the eanlings-] Lambs just dropt: from ean, eniti. MUSGRAVE. And when the work of generation was certain wands,] A wand in our author's time was the usual term for what we now call a switch. MALONE. 3 of kind,] i. e. of nature. So, Turberville, in his book of Falconry, 1575, р. 127: " So great is the curtesy of kind, as she ever seeketh to recompense any defect of hers with some other better benefit." Again, in Drayton's Mooncalf: 4 " nothing doth so please her mind, "As to see mares and horses do their kind." COLLINS. - the fulsome eves;) Fulsome, I believe, in this instance, means lascivious, obscene. The same epithet is bestowed on the night, in Acolastus his After-Witte. By S. N. 1600: "Why shines not Phœbus in the fulsome night?" In the play of Muleasses the Turk, Madam Fulsome a Bawd is introduced. The word, however, sometimes signifies offensive in smell. So, in Chapman's version of the 17th Book of the Odyssey: " and fill'd his fulsome scrip," &c. Again, in the dedication to Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, p. 63: "-noisome or fulsome for bad smells, as butcher's slaughter houses," &c. It is likewise used by Shakspeare in King John, to express some quality offensive to nature: "And stop this gap of breath with fulsome dust." Again, in Thomas Newton's Herball to the Bible, 8vo. 1587: "Having a strong sent and fulsome smell, which neither men nor beastes take delight to smell unto." Again, ibid: " Boxe is naturally dry, juicelesse, fulsomely and loathsomely smelling." Again, in Arthur Golding's translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses, B. XV: " But what have you poore sheepe misdone, a cattel meek "Sweete nectar," &c. STEEVENS. |