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ROMEO AND JULIET
[ACT IV.
But I will watch you from such watching now. |
[Exeunt Lady Capulet and Nurse.
Cap. | A jealous-hood,[C 1][E 1] a jealous-hood!— Enter three or four Servingmen, with spits, logs, and baskets. A jealous-hood, a jealous-hood!— Now, fellow, |
First Serv.[C 3] | Things for the cook, sir, but I know not what.15 |
Cap. | Make haste, make haste.[C 4]Make haste, make haste. [Exit first Serv.]— Sirrah, fetch drier logs: Call Peter, he will show thee where they are. |
Second Serv.[C 5] | I have a head, sir, that will find out logs, And never trouble Peter for the matter.[Exit.[C 6] |
Cap. | Mass, and well said; a merry whoreson, ha!20 Thou shalt be logger-head.—Good faith,[C 7] 'tis day: The county will be here with music straight, For so he said he would.[Music within.[C 8] For so he said he would. I hear him near.— Nurse!—Wife!—What, ho!—What, nurse, I say! |
- ↑ 13. jealous-hood] hyphen F 4.
- ↑ 14. What's] F 2, What is Q, What F.
- ↑ 15. First Serv.] Capell; Fel. [=Fellow] Q, F.
- ↑ 16. haste. [Exit …]] Capell, haste Q, haste, F.
- ↑ 18. Second Serv.] Capell; Fel. Q, F.
- ↑ 19. Exit] Capell.
- ↑ 21. faith] Qq 4, 5, F 2; father Q, F.
- ↑ 23. Music within] Capell (line 22), as here Cambridge; Play Musicke (after line 21) Q, F.
- ↑ 13. jealous-hood] What are called nonce-formations (made for an occasion) are common with -hood. Here the abstract, equivalent to jealousy, is put for the concrete.
hunt would, accordingly, mean pursuer of women. "Hunt," meaning hunter, is not uncommon; thus Turbervile, Book of Venerie (1575): "Then the chiefe hunte shall take his knife, and cut off the deares ryght foote." Dyce and others, however, explain mouse-hunt as the stoat, and attribute to the animal strong sexual propensities. Cassio (Dyce notes), in Othello, calls Bianca a "fitchew"—that is, a polecat.