Notes and Queries, Number 47, September 21, 1850 by Various
page 27 of 67 (40%)
page 27 of 67 (40%)
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_A Note on George Herbert's Poems._--In the notes by Coleridge attached to Pickering's edition of George Herbert's _Poems_, on the line-- "My flesh beg_u_n unto my soul in pain," Coleridge says-- "Either a misprint, or noticeable idiom of the word _began_: Yes! and a very beautiful idiom it is: the first colloquy or address of the flesh." The idiom is still in use in Scotland. "You had better not begin to me," is the first address or colloquy of the school-boy half-angry half-frightened at the bullying of a companion. The idiom was once English, though now obsolete. Several instances of it are given in the last edition of Foxe's _Martyrs_, vol. vi. p. 627. It has not been noticed, however, that the same idiom occurs in one of the best known passages of Shakspeare; in Clarence's dream, _Richard III._, Act i. Sc. 4.: "O, then _began_ the tempest _to_ my soul." Herbert's _Poems_ will afford another illustration to Shakspeare, _Hamlet_, Act iv. Sc. 7.:-- "And then this _should_ is like a spendthrift sigh, That hurts by easing." |
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