4
ROMEO AND JULIET
[ACT I.
Which, but their children's end, nought could remove, Is now the two hours' traffic[E 1] of our stage; The which if you with patient ears attend, What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend. [Exit.[C 1] |
ACT I[C 2]
SCENE I.—Verona. A public Place.
Enter Sampson and Gregory, of the house of Capulet, with swords and bucklers.
Sam. | Gregory, on[C 3] my word, we'll not carry coals[E 2]. |
Gre. | No, for then we should be colliers[E 3]. |
Sam. | I mean, an[C 4] we be in choler[E 4], we'll draw. |
Gre. | Ay, while you live, draw your neck out o' the[C 5] collar.5 |
Sam. | I strike quickly, being moved. |
- ↑ 12. two hours' traffic] Compare Henry VIII. Prologue, 12, 13: "May see away their shilling Richly in two short hours." The simple material apparatus of the Elizabethan stage tended to accelerate the performance.
- ↑ 1. carry coals] submit to menials' work, and so to humiliation or insult. New Eng. Dict. quotes J. Hooker, Girald. Ireland, in Holinshed (1586), ii. 105: "This gentleman was … one that in an upright quarrell would beare no coles."
- ↑ 2. colliers] New Eng. Dict.: "Often used with allusion to the dirtiness of the trade in coal, or the evil repute of the collier for cheating: cf. Greene's Coosnage of Colliers (1591)." See Twelfth Night III. iv. 130.
- ↑ 3. choler] The play on "choler," "collar," and "draw" occurs in Jonson's Every Man in his Humour, III. ii. (dialogue between Cob and Cash).