Read The Taming of the Shrew Online
Authors: William Shakespeare
Preparation of “
The Taming of the Shrew
in Performance” was assisted by a generous grant from the CAPITAL Centre (Creativity and Performance in Teaching and Learning) of the University of Warwick for research in the RSC archive at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust.
The second half of the introduction (“The Critics Debate”) draws extensively on a longer overview of the play’s critical history prepared for us by Sarah Carter.
Thanks as always to our indefatigable and eagle-eyed copy editor Tracey Day and to Ray Addicott for overseeing the production process with rigor and calmness.
Picture research by Michelle Morton. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust for assistance with picture research (special thanks to Helen Hargest) and reproduction fees.
Images of RSC productions are supplied by the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon. This Library, maintained by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, holds the most important collection of Shakespeare material in the UK, including the Royal Shakespeare Company’s official archive. It is open to the public free of charge.
For more information see
www.shakespeare.org.uk
.
1
. Directed by George Devine (1953) Angus McBean © Royal Shakespeare Company
2
. Directed by John Barton (1960) Angus McBean © Royal Shakespeare Company
3
. Directed by Di Trevis (1985) © Donald Cooper/photostage.co.uk
4
. Directed by Jonathan Miller (1987) Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
5
.
Directed by Michael Bogdanov (1978) Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
6
. Directed by Phyllida Lloyd (2003) © Donald Cooper/photostage.co.uk
7
. Directed by Gregory Doran (2003) Malcolm Davies © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
8
. Directed by Conall Morrison (2008) Simon Annand © Royal Shakespeare Company
9
. Reconstructed Elizabethan Playhouse © Charcoalblue
T
HE
M
ODERN
L
IBRARY
E
DITORIAL
B
OARD
Maya Angelou
•
A. S. Byatt
•
Caleb Carr
•
Christopher Cerf
•
Harold Evans
•
Charles Frazier
•
Vartan Gregorian
•
Jessica Hagedorn
•
Richard Howard
•
Charles Johnson
•
Jon Krakauer
•
Edmund Morris
•
Azar Nafisi
•
Joyce Carol Oates
•
Elaine Pagels
•
John Richardson
•
Salman Rushdie
•
Oliver Sacks
•
Carolyn See
•
Gore Vidal
1
pheeze
fix, get even with
2
A … stocks
i.e. I’ll put you in the stocks (instrument of punishment in which the arms or legs were confined)
3
baggage
good-for-nothing woman, harlot
4
chronicles
historical account
Richard Conqueror
Sly may confuse Richard Coeur-de-lion (Lionheart) with William the Conquerer
5
paucas pallabris
“few words” (corruption of the Spanish)
Sessa!
Be off! (cry used in hunting)/be quiet
6
burst
broken
7
denier
tenth of a penny
Go … Jeronimy
Sly confuses Saint Jerome with Hieronimo, a character in Thomas Kyd’s
The Spanish Tragedy
who cautioned himself with “Hieronimo, beware! Go by, go by!”
8
cold bed
perhaps a beggar’s bed, the damp ground
9
thirdborough
parish constable
10
by law
in court
11
kindly
by all means
12
charge
order
tender well
take good care of
13
Brach
bitch-hound (given that
Merriman
would seem a more suitable name for a male dog, some editors emend to “breathe”—i.e. “give breathing space to”—thus also improving the grammar)
cur
dog
embossed
exhausted, foaming at the mouth
14
couple
leash together
deep-mouthed brach
bitch with a loud bark
15
made it good
i.e. picked up the scent
16
coldest fault
when the scent was lost
19
cried … loss
howled upon discovering the scent when it had been completely lost
merest
total
22
fleet
swift
24
sup
feed
unto
after
29
bed but cold
cold bed in which
31
Grim … image
in his drunken stupor Sly resembles a corpse
32
practise on
trick
34
sweet
delightful/perfumed
35
banquet
light meal
36
brave
fine
37
forget himself
behave inappropriately/forget who he was
38
cannot choose
is bound to
39
strange
odd/wonderful
40
fancy
fanciful thought/imagining
43
hang it round
adorn it
wanton
lively
44
Balm
anoint, bathe
foul
dirty/unattractive
distillèd
fragrant
45
sweet
scented
47
dulcet
sweet
48
straight
straight away
49
low
humble
reverence
bow/servitude
53
ewer
jug containing water for handwashing
diaper
cloth
58
disease
illness/derangement
60
is
must be (mad)
62
kindly
naturally
63
passing
exceedingly
64
husbanded
managed
modesty
care/moderation
65
warrant
assure
66
As
so that
69
office
duty, role
70
Sirrah
sir (used to an inferior)
71
Belike
perhaps
74
An’t
if it
79
So please
if it please
duty
services
84
fitted
suited (to you)
87
happy
fortunate
88
rather for
more so because
89
cunning
professional skill
91
doubtful
apprehensive about
modesties
propriety, self-control
92
over-eyeing of
observing/staring at
94
merry passion
fit of laughter
96
impatient
angry
98
veriest antic
most complete buffoon
99
buttery
storeroom for provisions
101
want
lack
affords
has to offer
103
all suits
every aspect (puns on sense of “outfits”)
105
do him obeisance
bow/be submissive
106
as he will
if he wishes to
107
bear
must conduct
honourable action
dignified behavior
109
by them accomplishèd
performed by them (the
ladies
)
110
duty
reverence
111
tongue
voice
lowly
humble
116
with … bosom
bowing his head to his chest
119
esteemèd him
believed himself to be
122
commanded tears
tears on command
123
shift
purpose/trick
124
napkin
handkerchief
close conveyed
secretly carried
125
in despite
notwithstanding anything
126
dispatched
carried out
127
Anon
shortly
128
usurp the grace
take on the elegance
131
how
to see how
stay
prevent
133
in
go in
Haply
perhaps/hopefully
134
spleen
i.e. mood, impulse (the
spleen
was thought to be the seat of laughter)
running scene 1 continues
most editions assume a shift of location from “outside an ale-house” to “a bedroom in the lord’s house,” but the text suggests that the location of the whole induction is the lord’s house, the only move being from outside (the main stage) to the bedroom (above space)
1
small
weak (hence cheap)
2
sack
Spanish white wine
3
conserves
confections, sweetmeats
4
raiment
clothing
7
conserves of beef
salted beef
8
doublets
close-fitting jackets
11
look … over-leather
i.e. peep through holes
12
idle humour
mad whim
15
spirit
temperament/mood/fiend
17
Burtonheath
possibly Barton-on-the-heath, a village near Stratford-upon-Avon
18
cardmaker
maker of cards, instruments for combing wool
transmutation
change of condition
bear-herd
keeper of a performing bear
19
tinker
pot-mender
20
ale-wife
woman who keeps an ale-house
Wincot
village four miles south of Stratford-upon-Avon
21
on the score
in debt
score
tally kept by marking notches on a piece of wood
sheer
weak/drunk without food
score … for
reckon me to be
23
bestraught
out of my mind
25
droop
become despondent
27
As
as if
29
ancient
former
30
dreams
delusions
33
Apollo
Greek god of music
36
lustful
arousing desire
37
trimmed up
decked out
Semiramis
legendary queen of Assyria, famous for her voluptuousness
38
bestrow
scatter (probably with rushes)
39
trapped
adorned/fitted out