Read A Midsummer Night's Dream Online
Authors: William Shakespeare
161
seven leagues
about twenty-one miles
162
respects
considers
167
without
outside
169
doâ
â¦â
May
i.e. celebrate May Day
170
stay
wait
172
Cupid
Roman god of love
173
bestâ
â¦â
head
i.e. one causing love (Cupid's lead arrows were supposed to induce loathing)
174
simplicity
innocence
174
doves
symbols of fidelity, these birds drew the goddess of love's chariot
175
knitteth
binds together
176
Carthage queen
Dido, who committed suicide on a pyre when Aeneas deserted her
177
false Troyan
the Trojan Aeneas
183
fair
beautiful/fair-complexioned
185
happy
favored, lucky
186
lodestars
guiding stars
186
air
melody
187
tuneable
harmonious
188
green
fresh, new
189
favour
good looks/a favorable attitude
190
catch
seize
193
bated
omitted (with play on “baited, hooked”)
194
translated
transformed
200
move
arouse
203
none
i.e. no fault
206
fly
flee
212
Phoebe
another name for the Roman moon goddess
213
glass
mirror (i.e. water)
215
still
always
218
faint
pale
218
wont
accustomed
219
counsel
inmost thoughts/advice
222
strange
foreign, new
229
o'er other some
more than others
232
all
everyone else
235
quantity
value/substance/proportion (to what love makes them into)
236
form
ordered, attractive appearance/substance
238
blind
Cupid was traditionally depicted as a sightless
child
239
ofâ
â¦â
taste
the least bit of reason
240
figure
symbolize
242
beguiled
deceived, misguided
243
waggish
playful, mischievous
243
game
jest/play
243
themselves forswear
break their word
245
eyne
eyes
251
intelligence
information
252
dear expense
effort worth making/high price to pay (as Demetrius will pursue Hermia)/begrudging gratitude (from Demetrius)
Act 1, Scene 2
1.2
Quince
probably from “quines” or “quoins,” a
carpenter's
wooden wedges
1.2
Snug
close-fitting; a good name for a
joiner
(craftsman who makes furniture)
1.2
Bottom
the core onto which the
weaver's
yarn was wound, or a ball of thread; did not have modern sense of “arse”
Flute
suggests the fluted pipes of a church organ operated by
bellows;
perhaps Flute also has a reedy, high voice
1.2
Snout
possibly Snout has a large nose (some editors suppose a reference to the spout of a kettle, which a
tinker
would have to mend, but sixteenth-century kettles did not have spouts)
1.2
Starveling
tailors were proverbially thin
2
generally
malapropism for “severally” (i.e. individually)
3
scrip
scrap of paper/script (i.e. what is written down; the word did not have its modern theatrical sense)
5
interlude
short play
7
treats on
deals with, is about
8
growâ
â¦â
point
approach a conclusion
10
Marry
by the Virgin Mary
14
spread yourselves
spread out
20
ask
require
22
condole
express great sorrow
23
humour
inclination
23
Ercles
i.e. the Greek hero Hercules
23
rarely
magnificently, exceptionally
24
tearâ
â¦â
in
rant and bluster
24
split
go to pieces
26
shivering
shattering
29
Phibbus' car
the chariot of Phoebus, the sun god
31
mar
ruin
32
Fates
three goddesses in control of human destiny
33
lofty
grandiose, exalted, impressive
34
vein
temperament
38
wand'ring
i.e. on a mission
42
That's all one
it doesn't matter
43
small
high-pitched
43
will
can
44
An
if
52
Thisbe'sâ
â¦â
Thisbe's father
these characters never actually appear
57
fitted
equipped, provided for (perhaps maintaining the language of joinery)
60
do it extempore
improvise
70
discretion
sound judgment
71
aggravate
malapropism for “moderate”
72
roar
roar for
72
sucking dove
conflation of “sitting dove” and “sucking lamb,” both proverbially quiet and gentle
72
an 'twere
as if it were
75
proper
handsome
81
discharge
perform
81
your
i.e. you know the sort
82
orange-tawny
yellowish-brown
82
purple-in-grain
dyed red
83
French-crown-coloured
i.e. the gold color of the French coin
84
crowns
heads; baldness was an effect of syphilis (“the French disease”)
87
con
learn
90
devices
plans
91
draw
draw up
91
bill
list
94
obscenely
malapropism, perhaps for “seemly” or “obscurely”
94
courageously
spiritedly
94
perfect
word perfect
96
holdâ
â¦â
bowstrings
archers' saying, possibly meaning “stand firm and fight, or cut your bowstrings in preparation for capture”
Act 2, Scene 1
2.1
Location: a wood near Athens Robin Goodfellow
name traditionally given to a mischievous hobgoblin
2.1
Puck
a kind of mischievous goblin
4
park
enclosed hunting ground
4
pale
fenced-in area
5
Thorough
through
7
sphere
stars and planets were thought to be contained within revolving hollow spheres
9
orbs
i.e. fairy rings (dark circles in the grass)
10
pensioners
bodyguards
12
favours
tokens of favor
13
savours
(sweet) scent
16
lob
country bumpkin
17
anon
soon
20
passing fell
excessively fierce
20
wrath
angry
23
changeling
child taken by the fairies (usually exchanged for a fairy child)
25
trace
traverse
26
perforce
forcibly
29
fountain
spring
29
sheen
brightness
30
square
quarrel
32
making
physical appearance
32
quite
entirely
33
shrewd
cunning
35
villagery
villages
36
Skim
take the cream off
36
quern
churn; also a mill for grinding corn
37
bootless
in vain
38
barm
yeasty froth on top of fermenting ale
39
mislead
i.e. with false fire that moves from place to place
46
bean-fed
well-fed
47
filly
female
48
gossip's
old friend's
48
bowl
i.e. drinking cup
49
crab
crab apple
51
dewlap
loose fold of skin hanging at the neck
52
aunt
old woman
55
“tailor”
cry of surprise; possibly because she ends up sitting on the floor (customary posture for tailors), or because she sits on her “tail” (i.e.
bum
)
56
quire
company
57
waxen
increase
57
neeze
sneeze
58
wasted
spent
59
room
make way
59
Oberon
name often given to the King of Fairies
59.1
Titania
used by Ovid to refer to Diana (moon goddess) and Circe (enchantress)
64
Tarry
stay
64
wanton
willful one, perhaps also with sense of “promiscuous”
64
lord
husband
65
lady
wife
67
Corin
conventional pastoral name
68
corn
straw
68
versing
composing/uttering verses of
69
Phillida
conventional pastoral name
70
step
limit
71
forsooth
in truth
71
bouncing
big, strapping (perhaps with sexual connotations)
72
buskined
wearing high hunting boots (“buskins”)
76
Glance at
refer to/cast aspersions on
76
credit
favor
78
glimmering
twinkling, shimmering
79
Perigenia
(sometimes spelled “Perigouna”) Theseus slept with her after he killed her robber father
79
ravishèd
carried off/seized/raped
80
Aegles
nymph loved by Theseus
81
Ariadne
she helped Theseus find his way out of the labyrinth; he then abandoned her
81
Antiopa
Amazon seduced or abducted by Theseus before being abandoned by him
83
middle summer's spring
i.e. beginning of midsummer
84
mead
meadow
85
pavèd
with a pebbly base
85
rushy
edged with rushes
86
in
on
86
beachèd
covered with shingle
86
margent
margin, edge
87
ringlets
circular fairy dance
88
brawls
quarrels/noise; also lively French dance (contrasts with calmer
ringlets
)
88
sport
recreation
89
piping
whistling
91
Contagious
pestilential/harmful
92
petty
small
92
proud
swollen
93
overborne their continents
exceeded their boundaries (i.e. flooded)