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SHAKSPEARE AND HIS TIMES.
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than Falstaff in Canary sack, formed a part of the joyous band, from which, doubtless, he rarely separated. But their strength was not equal to their courage. On arriving at the place of meeting, the champions of Stratford found out that the Topers had set out for a neighboring fair. The Sippers, who, to all appearance, were less formidable opponents, remained alone, and proposed to try the fortune of war. The offer was accepted; but in a short time the Stratford party were thoroughly knocked up, and reduced to the sad necessity of employing their little remaining reason in using their legs as they best might to effect a retreat. The operation was difficult, and soon became impossible. They had hardly gone a mile, when their strength failed, and the whole party bivouacked for the night under a crab-tree, which, travelers tell us, is still standing on the road from Stratford to Bidford, and is known by the name of Shakspeare’s Tree. On the following morning, his comrades, refreshed and invigorated by rest and sleep, endeavored to induce him to return with them to avenge the affront they had received on the previous evening; but Shakspeare refused to go back, and, looking round on the villages which were to be seen from the point on which he stood, exclaimed, “No, I have had enough drinking with


Piping Pebworth, dancing Marston,
Haunted Hillborough, hungry Grafton,
Dudging[1] Exhall, Papist Wicksford,
Beggarly Broom, and drunken Bidford.’”[2]


This conclusion of the adventure gives rise to the presumption that debauchery had less share than gayety in

  1. Sulky, stubborn, in dudgeon.
  2. Several of these villages still retain the reputation ascribed to them by Shakspeare in this quatrain.