{"id":"01KG8B0BB2N5Z9SX02E6GJZS1H","cid":"bafkreic5ntr4ox3rcgughe3467jwpqfhol2bnev45uylr3ufkw2rzv5tvy","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreias4pztmr4dnfdmzyc7nyw57kkna3ymssh7lwko36qkhkx5zsbme4","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"03_merry_wives_of_windsor_1905_page_0176.jpg","height":1778,"key":"pdf-page-1769806505259-qzo1gnvmz7m","label":"03_merry_wives_of_windsor_1905_page_0176.jpg","page_number":176,"pdf_type":"born_digital","size":347318,"text":"170 Notes [Act II\nhe has no confidence in Mistress Page's fidelity. The meaning, as\nMalone puts it, is \" has such perfect confidence in his unchaste\nwife.\"\n232. Made there. Did there. Cf. iv. 2. 53 below : \" But what\nmake you here ? \" The idiom was a common one, and is played\nupon in L. L. L. iv. 3. 190 and Rick. III. i. 3. 164 fol.\nScene II. — 6. Grated upon. Worried, vexed ; as in 2 Hen.\nIV. iv. I. 90: \"suborn'd to grate on you.\" For the transitive ^ra/^\nin the same sense, see Ham. iii. i. 3 and A. and C.\\. i. 18.\n7. Coach- fellow. Companion ; commonly explained as = \"a\nhorse drawing in the same carriage with another\" (Schmidt).\n8. Geminy. Couple, pair (Latin gemint) ; used by S. only\nhere.\n11. The handle of her fan. As Steevens notes, fans were then\nmore costly than now, being made of ostrich feathers, set into\nhandles of gold, silver, ivory, etc. He quotes, among other refer-\nences to these, Marston, Satires, 1578 : —\n\" And buy a hoode and silver-handled fan\nWith fortie pound.\"\n12. / took V upon mine konour. I protested by mine honour.\nQi.K.Jokny i. I. no: — \" And took it on his death\nThat this my mother's son was none of his.\"\n\\^. A skort knife and a throng! That is, for cutting purses in\na crowd. Purses, it will be remembered, were usually hung to the\ngirdle. Malone quotes Overbury, Characters : \"The eye of this\nwolf is as quick in his head as a cutpurse in a throng.\"\n17. Pickt-hatch! A cant name for a district of bad repute in\nLondon. Steevens quotes several references to it from Jonson and\nother writers of the time. He suggests also a plausible origin for\nthe term. A hatch (see K. fohn, i. i. 171) was a half-door (that\nis, with the lower half arranged to shut, leaving the upper half\nopen like a window), and this was sometimes protected by picks, ot","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:55:05.259Z","text_extracted_by":"pdf-processor","text_has_content":true,"text_source":"born_digital","uploaded":true,"width":1084},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG89K4N3KNPAGDJAVRPVWBA4","predicate":"derived_from"},{"peer":"01KG89JREDR8WY5QQGYR5FZRDY","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:55:07.362Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:55:10.905Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFH6ETXGRVD10WPNP3007D6"}}