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j.) = true or real and may be traced to Lat. _verus_ = true: comp. l. 646. 429. ~shagged ... shades~. 'Shagged' is rugged or shaggy, and 'horrid' is probably used in the Latin sense of 'rough': see note, l. 38. 430. ~unblenched~, undaunted, unflinching. This word, sometimes confounded with 'unblanched,' is from _blench_, a causal of _blink_. 431. ~Be it not~: a conditional clause = on condition that it be not. 432. ~Some say~, etc. Compare _Hamlet_, i. 1. 158: "Some say that, ever against that season comes Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated, The bird of dawning singeth all night long: And then, they say, no spirit dares stir abroad." 433. ~In fog or fire~, etc. Comp. _Il Pens._ 93, "those demons that are found In fire, air, flood, or underground": an allusion to the different orders and powers of demons as accepted in the Middle Ages. Burton, in his _Anat. of Mel._, quotes from a writer who thus enumerates the kinds of sublunary spirits--"fiery, aerial, terrestrial, watery, and subterranean, besides fairies, satyrs, nymphs, etc." 434. ~meagre hag~, lean witch. _Hag_ is from A.S. _haegtesse_, a prophetess or witch. Comp. _Par. Lost_, ii. 662; _M. W. of W._ iv. 2. 188, "Come down, you witch, you _hag_." ~unlaid ghost~, unpacified or wandering spirit. It was a superstition that ghosts left the world of spirits and wandered on the earth from the hour of curfew (see _Temp._ v. 1. 40; _King Lear_, iii. 4. 120, "This is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet; he begins at curfew," etc.) until "the first cock his matin rings" (_L'Alleg._ 14). 'Curfew' (Fr. _couvre-feu_ = fire-cover), the bell that was rung at eight or nine o'clock in the evening as a signal that all fires and lights were to be extinguished. 436. ~swart faery of the mine~. In Burton's _Anat. of Mel._ we read, "Subterranean devils are as common as the rest, and do as much harm. Olaus Magnus makes six kinds of them, some bigger, some less. These are commonly seen about mines of metals," etc. Warton quotes from an old writer: "Pioneers or diggers for metal do affirm that in many mines there appear strange shapes and spirits who are apparelled like unto the labourers in the pit." 'Swart' (also _swarty_, _swarth_, and _swarthy_) here means black: in Scandinavian mythology these subterranean spirits were called the _Svartalfar_, or black elves. Comp. _Lyc._ 138, "the _swart_ star," where 'swart' = swart making. 438. ~Do ye believe~. _
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