Authors: William Shakespeare
26
sanctity
holiness  Â
29
fury
strong passion  Â
anon
presently  Â
35
for
because  Â
36
Perdita
literally “the lost one” Â Â
37
ungentle
ignoble/cruel  Â
39
shrieks
ghosts were traditionally supposed to shriek in high-pitched voices  Â
42
toys
trifles  Â
44
squared
ruled  Â
49
speed
fare, survive  Â
50
character
written account of her history and parentage  Â
these
gold and jewels later found with the baby  Â
51
breed ⦠thine
pay for your upbringing with sufficient left over  Â
53
fault
crime  Â
56
enjoined
committed, obliged  Â
59
clamour
the noise of hunters and dogs or the roar of the bear  Â
60
chase
hunt (of Antigonus)/hunted
bear
 Â
bear
a real polar bear cub was available at the time of the play's first performance, but some scholars assume an actor in bear costume  Â
65
ancientry
elderly/ancestors  Â
66
boiled-brains
idiots  Â
67
this
in this  Â
70
browsing of
feeding on  Â
an't be thy
if it be God's  Â
71
bairn
child  Â
72
child
baby girl  Â
73
scape
sexual transgression  Â
bookish
well-read  Â
74
stair-work ⦠behind-door-work
i.e. secret sexual liaisons (
work
plays on the sense of “sexual activity” and
trunk
plays on the sense of “body”) Â Â
76
warmer
i.e. from sexual activity  Â
got
begot, conceived  Â
77
tarry
wait  Â
hallooed
called out  Â
78
Clown
a rustic, comic character; the Shepherd's son  Â
80
on
about  Â
81
ailest
troubles/prevents  Â
85
firmament
sky  Â
bodkin's
pin/needle  Â
87
chafes
seethes  Â
88
takes up
consumes/rebukes  Â
90
boring
piercing  Â
91
anon
then/shortly  Â
yeast
foam  Â
92
hogshead
cask of alcohol  Â
land-service
combat on land/food served on land (i.e. events on land) Â Â
95
make ⦠ship
finish the story of the ship/tell you how the ship met its end  Â
96
flap-dragoned
consumed (as in a game of flapdragon, where raisins are plucked from burning brandy and swallowed) Â Â
101
winked
shut my eyes  Â
104
by
nearby  Â
106
your ⦠footing
you would have been unable to stand (
footing
puns on the sense of “establishment of a
charity
”) Â Â
107
Heavy
grave, sorrowful  Â
108
met'st
met  Â
109
bearing-cloth
christening robe  Â
110
squire
i.e. one of a relatively high social position  Â
112
changeling
child taken by the fairies, or the one substituted for it  Â
115
you're ⦠live
you will live prosperously  Â
116
fairy gold
if not kept secret, riches brought by fairies were thought to bring bad luck  Â
117
close
secret  Â
next
nearest  Â
118
still
yet/always  Â
122
curst
vicious  Â
125
what
who  Â
126
Marry
by the Virgin Mary  Â
1
try
test (proverbial: “time tries all things”) Â Â
both ⦠Of
bringer of both joy and terror to the  Â
2
unfolds
reveals  Â
4
wings
Time was traditionally depicted as winged  Â
6
growth untried
development unexamined  Â
8
self-born
selfsame/self-created (by Time) Â Â
9
plant and o'erwhelm
create and overrule  Â
10
ere ⦠received
since the beginning of time, before the oldest laws and customs were set down and before those of the present day  Â
11
witness
bear willing testimony  Â
12
them
i.e. law and custom  Â
do
be  Â
13
stale ⦠present
redundant and past what is now fresh and gleaming  Â
15
seems to it
seems old in comparison to the present  Â
16
glass
hourglass  Â
17
As
as if  Â
Leontes ⦠himself
leaving Leontes to the consequences of his foolish jealousies, so distraught he shuts himself away  Â
20
Gentle
noble, wellborn/ excellent/polite, courteous  Â
22
king's
i.e. Polixenes' Â Â
23
pace
proceed  Â
25
Equal with wond'ring
as great as the admiration her
grace
inspires  Â
26
list not prophesy
wish not to foretell  Â
28
adheres
pertains  Â
29
argument
subject matter  Â
31
yet
yet allow  Â
1
importunate
persistent, urging  Â
2
'tis ⦠denying
it makes me ill to deny  Â
3
fifteen
the discrepancy between Camillo's fifteen and Time's sixteen years may be a scribal error or a slip on Shakespeare's part  Â
4
been aired
lived  Â
6
feeling
heartfelt  Â
allay
comfort  Â
7
o'erween
presume  Â
11
want
be without  Â
made me businesses
handled affairs for me  Â
15
considered
rewarded  Â
16
heaping friendships
growth of Camillo's kindnesses/increase of mutual friendship  Â
17
fatal
deadly  Â
20
reconciled
remorseful, confessed  Â
23
unhappy
miserable/unfortunate  Â
gracious
virtuous  Â
24
approved
proved  Â
28
missingly noted
noticed in his absence  Â
retired
absent  Â
29
exercises
activities, pastimes  Â
32
eyes ⦠service
employees to watch him  Â
33
removedness
absence/where he goes  Â
37
unspeakable estate
indescribable wealth  Â
39
rare note
exceptional report  Â
40
begin
originate  Â
42
angle
fishhook  Â
44
question
conversation  Â
45
uneasy
difficult  Â
46
present
immediate  Â
Autolycus
literally, “the wolf himself” or “the lone wolf”; in classical mythology, he was a crafty thief  Â
1
peer
peep out/appear  Â
2
doxy
whore/low woman  Â
3
sweet o'
sweetest part of  Â
4
pale
paleness/domain  Â
5
sheet ⦠hedge
spring-cleaning involved washing linen, which was hung out to dry on hedges  Â
7
set ⦠edge
unclear; the general sense seems to be “whet my appetite for thieving” (“to pug” means “to tug or pull,” hence possibly “to steal”); alternative possibility is sexual (“pug” meant mistress/whore and “tooth” was associated with desire, as in “toothsome”) Â Â
11
aunts
whores, wenches  Â
12
tumbling
having sex  Â
13
three-pile
costly thick velvet  Â
14
out of service
unemployed  Â
19
tinkers
menders of metal pots and kettles (also applied to beggars and thieves) Â Â
leave to live
permission to live freely  Â
20
sow-skin budget
pigskin toolbag  Â
stocks
instrument of punishment in which the arms or legs were confined  Â
22
in ⦠avouch it
affirm that I am a tinker (rather than a vagabond) and thus escape punishment  Â
23
traffic
trade, goods  Â
kite ⦠linen
the kite (a bird of prey) supposedly stole pieces of cloth to build its nest; Autolycus steals
sheets
that have been left out to dry  Â
24
littered under
fathered by/born under the influence of (the connotations of animal birth recall Autolycus' wolfishness) Â Â
25
Mercury
Roman god of thieves/the planet  Â
unconsidered
disregarded, unattended  Â
26
die
i.e. gambling  Â
drab
whoring/pimping  Â
caparison
clothing, outfit  Â
27
silly cheat
petty deception/foolish victim of my trickery  Â
Gallows and knock
hanging and beating (punishments of a highwayman) Â Â
29
For ⦠come
as for the future/the afterlife  Â
31
'leven wether tods
eleven sheep will produce 12 kg (a
tod
) of wool  Â
32
odd
one  Â
34
springe
trap  Â
cock
woodcock, a proverbially stupid bird  Â
35
counters
round metal disks used for calculating  Â
36
sheep-shearing feast
festival held between May and July; the shearing of the sheep was accompanied by general celebrations  Â
39
lays it on
sets about it thoroughly  Â
made me
made  Â
40
nosegays
posies of flowers  Â