Read The Merchant of Venice Online
Authors: William Shakespeare
2.
Directed by Denis Carey (1953). Angus McBean © Royal Shakespeare Company
3.
Directed by John Barton (1978). Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
4.
Directed by Gregory Doran (1997). Malcolm Davies © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
5.
Directed by David Thacker (1993). Malcolm Davies © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
6.
Directed by Darko Tresnjak (2007). © Donald Cooper/photostage.co.uk
7.
Directed by Trevor Nunn (1999). © Donald Cooper/photostage.co.uk
8.
Directed by Bill Alexander (1988). Reg Wilson © 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
2010 Modern Library Paperback Edition
Copyright © 2007, 2010 by The Royal Shakespeare Company
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
M
ODERN
L
IBRARY
and the T
ORCHBEARER
Design are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
“Royal Shakespeare Company,” “RSC,” and the RSC logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Royal Shakespeare Company.
The version of
The Merchant of Venice
and the corresponding footnotes that appear in this volume were originally published in
William Shakespeare: Complete Works
, edited by Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen, published in 2007 by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.
eISBN: 978-1-58836-874-4
v3.0
1
sooth
truth
4
stuff
substance
whereof … born
i.e. what is its cause
5
to learn
yet to discover
6
want-wit
senseless idiot
7
ado
trouble
8
tossing on
troubled/preoccupied with
9
argosies
large merchant ships
portly
stately, majestic
sail
sails/(act of) sailing
10
signiors
sirs/gentlemen
burghers
citizens
flood
sea
11
pageants
spectacles, shows
12
overpeer
look down upon
petty traffickers
inferior merchant ships
13
curtsy
bow or curtsy, perhaps suggested by the bobbing of the smaller ships in the argosies’ wake
do them reverence
pay them respect
14
fly
speed
woven wings
material sails (also suggestive of the wings of a
fly
)
15
venture
risky business enterprise
forth
away from home, i.e. on the seas
16
better part
greater half
affections
emotions/thoughts
17
hopes
expectations, prospects
still
constantly
18
where sits
i.e. which way blows
19
roads
harbors
24
ague
fever, shaking
26
should
i.e. could
27
flats
sandbanks
28
Andrew
name of a ship
29
Vailing
lowering (in submission)
high top
top section of the mast
ribs
i.e. body of the ship
30
burial
burial place
should I
was I able to
32
bethink me straight
think immediately
33
but
merely
gentle
noble/harmless
34
stream
current
35
waters … silks
may play on idea of “watered silk,” a relatively new fabric
36
even
just
this
this much (i.e. the value of the cargo)
39
bechanced
having happened
43
bottom
ship’s bottom, hold
44
estate
fortunes/circumstances
45
Upon
dependent on/risked upon
fortune
chance, fate
48
Fie
expression of impatience or disgust
52
Janus
Roman god with two faces
53
framed
formed
54
peep
peer through eyes half-closed in laughter
55
bagpiper
bagpipes were thought to sound melancholic
56
other
others
vinegar aspect
sour expression
58
Though
even if
Nestor
Trojan leader, noted for his wisdom and gravity
Gratiano
according to a contemporary Italian dictionary, a name given to a foolish or clownish character in a play
63
prevented
forestalled
64
dear
valuable
regard
consideration
66
embrace
welcome
th’occasion
the opportunity
68
laugh
i.e. meet for some fun
69
strange
distant/unfamiliar
70
leisures … yours
spare time accommodate yours, i.e. ensure we are available when you are
73
have in mind
i.e. think about
76
respect … world
concern for worldly affairs/business
77
it
enjoyment (especially of material wealth)
buy … care
i.e. worry so much about it
78
marvellously
extremely
79
hold
consider, view
83
old
your former/plentiful/familiar, “good old” (puns on the sense of “elderly”)
84
liver
thought to be the seat of the passions
85
heart … groans
groans were believed to drain blood from the heart
mortifying
penitential/deadly
87
grandsire
grandfather
cut in alabaster
i.e. a statue on a tomb
88
creep … jaundices
become yellow from an excess of yellow bile or choler
89
peevish
irritable, morose
91
visages
faces
92
cream and mantle
become covered in a layer of scum (i.e. are calm/expressionless)
standing
still/stagnant
93
wilful
deliberate
stillness
restraint/quietness
entertain
maintain
94
dressed … opinion
invested with a reputation
95
conceit
understanding
96
As … say
as if to say
97
ope
open
101
damn … fools
condemn the hearers for obliging them to call the speakers fools (according to the Bible a damnable offense)
104
melancholy bait
i.e. silence used to fool people into assuming you are wise
105
fool
foolish
gudgeon
proverbially gullible fish
107
exhortation
earnest speech/entreaty
109
dumb
silent
113
grow
become
for this gear
as a result of this talk/on account of this matter
115
neat’s tongue dried
cured ox tongue
vendible
saleable/sought-after (for marriage)
116
Is … now?
Did that (talk) mean anything?
118
reasons
reasonings, opinions
119
ere
before
122
same
i.e. one
126
disabled
devalued
127
something
somewhat
swelling port
extravagant lifestyle
128
faint
inadequate
grant continuance
allow maintenance (of)
129
make moan
complain
abridged
deprived
130
noble rate
high style of living
care
concern
131
come … from
i.e. repay
132
time
(young) age/time spent
prodigal
excessive, lavish
133
gaged
pledged/entangled
135
warranty
authorization
136
unburden
reveal
140
Within … honour
i.e. honorable
142
occasions
needs
143
shaft
arrow
144
his … flight
the same type of arrow
145
advisèd
careful
146
forth
out
adventuring
risking
147
urge
bring forward
proof
test/example
148
innocence
sincerity
151
self
same
153
or
either
154
hazard
i.e. that which was risked subsequently
155
rest
remain
156
spend but
only waste
157
wind … circumstance
ingratiate yourself by speaking in an elaborate, roundabout way
158
out of
without
159
making … uttermost
questioning my offer of all the help I can give
160
made waste
spent/wasted
161
but
only
163
pressed
enlisted
164
richly left
with a large inheritance (left by her father)
166
Sometimes
formerly, at one time