Comedy of Much Ado About Nothing

Cover Comedy of Much Ado About Nothing
Comedy of Much Ado About Nothing
William Shakespeare , William James Rolfe
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3. 90 : " Here 's snip and nip and cut and slish and slash ;" but it is doubtful whether it there has this technical meaning, Petruchio seems to be merely referring in a profane masculine way to the complicated cutting of the garment, which he has just said is " carv'd like an apple-tart." Immediately after, when the tailor asks, " But did you not request to have it cut ?" he replies, J' I bid thy master cut out the gown ; but I did not bid him cut it to pieces." Perhaps this dialect of the man...tua-maker is beyond the ken of the male critic 19. Down sleeves, " Hanging sleeves" (Schmidt). As side-sleeves un- doubtedly means long or hanging sleeves, Steevens reads "set with pearls down sleeves." In Laneham's Account of Queen Elizabeth's En- tertainment at Kenelworth-Castle, 1575, the minstrel's "gown had side- sleeves down to the mid-leg." Stowe, in his Chronicle, describes the^e sleeves as worn in the time of Henry IV., ^me of which, he says, "hung downe to the feete, and at least to the knees, full of cuts and jagges, whereupon were made these verses : * Now hath this land little neede of broomes, To sweepe away the filth out of the street^, Sen side-sleeves of pennilesse groomes Will it up licke be it drie or weete.' " Side or syde is said to be used, in the North of England and in Scot- land, in the sense o( l^ng when applied to garments.

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