Read The Unfortunate Traveller and Other Works Online
Authors: Thomas Nashe
80
. Labouring.
81
. Meaning unknown.
82
. Lived through many difficulties.
83
Fetters.
84
. Leg-irons.
85
. Literally a bird's crop.
86
. Between Newgate and Smithfield, famous for cooks' shops.
87
. Colloquial for a coin of small value.
88
. His name was Robert Harvey.
89
. Food.
*
.
Discite qui sapitis, non haec quae scimus inertes; Sed trepidas acies, et fera bella sequi
.
15
â
.
Est aliquid fatale malum per verba levare
.
17
*
.
Scribimus indocti doctique poemata passim
.
24
â
.
Heu rapiunt mala fata bonos
.
25
*
.
Non bene conducti vendunt periuria testes
.
52
*
. No; I'll be sworn upon a book have I not.
â
.
Id est
, for the freedom of gold.
*
. The devil hath children, as other men, but few of them know their own father.
*
. Sparagus: a flower that never groweth but through a man's dung.
*
. As by carrying tales, or playing the doughty pander.
*
. If you know him not by any of these marks, look on his fingers and you shall be sure to find half a dozen silver rings, worth threepence apiece.
*
. And that sense oftentimes makes them senseless.
â
. Withered flowers need much watering.
*
. Italy the storehouse of all murderous inventions.
*
. As Cardinal Wolsey, for example.
*
. Little men for the most part are most angry.
â
. Newgate, a common name for all prisons, as Homo is a common name for a man or a woman.
*
.
Absit arrogantia
,
185
that this speech should concern all divines, but such dunces as abridge men of their lawful liberty, and care not how unprepared they speak to their auditory.
*
. Such sermons I mean as our sectaries preach in ditches, and other conventicles, when they leap from the cobbler's stall to their pulpits.
*
. Plin., lib.
3
.
*
. I would tell you in what book it is, but I am afraid it would make his book sell in his latter days, which hitherto hath lain dead, and been a great loss to the printer.
*
. Look at the chandler's shop or at the flaxwife' stall, if you see no tow nor soap wrapped up in the tide page of such a pamphlet as
âIncerti Authoris Io Paean'
[âOf uncertain authorshipâ¦'].
*
. Which at home, iwis, was worth a dozen of halters at least, for if I be not deceived, his father was a ropemaker.
*
. His own words.
*
. Or rather Belly-alls, because all their mind is on their belly.
*
. Drinking
super nagulum
, a device of drinking new come out of France; which is, after a man hath turned up the bottom of the cup, to drop it on his nail, and make a pearl with that is left; which, if it shed, and he cannot make stand on by reason there's too much, he must drink again for his penance.
*
.
Videlicet
, before he come out of his bed, then a set breakfast, then dinner, then afternoon's nunchings, a supper, and a rere-supper.
*
. The fatal wooden horse at Troy fetched in with such pomp.
â
. Cleopatra's glorious sailing to meet Antony.
â¡
. The solemn bringing of the champions at Olympus.
§
. Tugging forth by the strength of their arms.
*
. Manny
quasi
Manly, and from him I take it the Mannies of Kent are descended.
*
. John Thurkle.
*
. The Sybarites
307
never would make any banquet under a twelve month's warning.
*
. As much to say as Urrey, Urrey, Urrey, one of the principal places where the herring is caught.
*
. Turbanto, the great lawn roll Turks wear about their heads.