To her, whose state is such, that cannot choose Hel. Count. Madam, I had. Wherefore? tell true." For general sovereignty; and that he will'd me To cure the desperate languishings, whereof Count. For Paris, was it? speak. This was your motive Hel. My lord your son made me to think of this; Had, from the conversation of my thoughts, Count. But think you, Helen, If you should tender your supposed aid, He would receive it? He and his physicians Are of a mind; he, that they cannot help him, say- "If ever you wished that the deity who presides over chastity, and the queen of amorous rites, were one and the same person; or, in other words, if ever you wished for the honest and lawful completion of your chaste desires." I believe, however, the words were accidentally transposed at the press, and would read Love dearly, and wish chastly, that your Dian &c. Malone. 9 tell true.] This is an evident interpolation. It is needless, because it repeats what the Countess had already said: it is injurious, because it spoils the measure. Steevens. 1 notes, whose faculties inclusive-] Receipts in which greater virtues were inclosed than appeared to observation. Johnson. A poor unlearned virgin, when the schools, Hel. There's something hints, More than my father's skill, which was the greatest Shall, for my legacy, be sanctified By the luckiest stars in heaven: and, would your honour But give me leave to try success, I'd venture The well-lost life of mine on his grace's cure, By such a day, and hour. Count. Dost thou believe 't? Hel. Ay, madam, knowingly. Count. Why, Helen, thou shalt have my leave, and love, Means, and attendants, and my loving greetings What I can help thee to, thou shalt not miss. [Exeunt. 2 Embowell'd of their doctrine,] i. e. exhausted of their skill. So, in the old spurious play of K. John: "Back war-men, back; embowel not the clime." Steevens. 3 There's something hints More than my father's skill, that his good receipt, &c.] The old copy reads-some thing in 't. Steevens. Here is an inference, [that] without any thing preceding, to which it refers, which makes the sentence vicious, and shows that we should read There's something hints More than my father's skill, i. e. I have a secret premonition, or presage. Warburton. This necessary correction was made by Sir Thomas Hanmer. Malone. into thy attempt:] So in the old copy. We might more intelligibly read, according to the third folio,-unto thy attempt. Steevens. ACT II.....SCENE I. Paris. A Room in the King's Palace. Flourish. Enter King, with young Lords taking leave for the Florentine war; BErtram, ParOLLES, and Attendants. King. Farewel,' young lord, these warlike principles Do not throw from you:-and you, my lord, farewel:6Share the advice betwixt you; if both gain all, The gift doth stretch itself as 'tis receiv'd, And is enough for both. 1 Lord. It is our hope, sir, After well-enter'd soldiers, to return And find your grace in health. King. No, no, it cannot be; and yet my heart Will not confess he owes the malady 5 Farewel, &c.] In all the latter copies these lines stood thus: Farewel, young lords; these warlike principles Do not throw from you. You, my lords, farewel; The gift doth stretch itself as 'tis receiv'd. The third line in that state was unintelligible. Sir T. Hanmer reads thus: Farewel, young lord: these warlike principles Do not throw from you; you, my lord, farewel; And is enough for both. The first edition, from which the passage is restored, was sufficiently clear; yet it is plain, that the latter editors preferred a reading which they did not understand. Johnson. 6 and you, my lord, farewel:] The old copy, both in this and the following instance, reads-lords. Steevens. It does not any where appear that more than two French lords (besides Bertram) went to serve in Italy; and therefore I think the King's speech should be corrected thus: Farewel, young lord; these warlike principles Do not throw from you; and you, my lord, farewel; what follows, shows this correction to be necessary: Share the advice betwixt you; if both gain all, &c. Tyrwhitt. Tyrwhitt's emendation is clearly right. Advice is the only thing that may be shared between two, and yet both gain all. M. Mason. 7 That doth my life besiege. Farewel, young lords; Will not confess he owes the malady when That doth my life besiege. i. e. as the common phrase runs, I am still heart-whole; my spirits, by not sinking under my distemper, do not acknowledge its influence. (Those 'bate, that inherit but the fall Steevens. Of the last monarchy) see, &c.] The ancient geographers have divided Italy into the higher and the lower, the Apennine hills being a kind of natural line of partition; the side next the Adriatic was denominated the higher Italy, and the other side the lower: and the two seas followed the same terms of distinction, the Adriatic being called the upper Sea, and the Tyrrhene or Tuscan the lower. Now the Sennones or Senois, with whom the Florentines are here supposed to be at war, inhabited the higher Italy, their chief town being Arminium, now called Rimni, upon the Adriatic. Hanmer. Italy, at the time of this scene, was under three very different tenures. The emperor, as successor of the Roman emperors, had one part; the pope, by a pretended donation from Constantine, another; and the third was composed of free states. Now by the last monarchy is meant the Roman, the last of the four general monarchies. Upon the fall of this monarchy, in the scramble, several cities set up for themselves, and became free states: now these might be said properly to inherit the fall of the monarchy. This being premised, let us now consider sense. The King says higher Italy; giving it the rank of preference to France; but he corrects himself, and says, I except those from that precedency, who only inherit the fall of the last monarchy; as all the little petty states; for instance, Florence, to whom these volunteers were going. As if he had said, I give the place of honour to the emperor and the pope, but not to the free states. Warburton. Sir T. Hanmer reads: Those bastards that inherit, &c. with this note: "Reflecting upon the abject and degenerate condition of the cities and states which arose out of the ruins of the Roman empire, the last of the four great monarchies of the world." Dr. Warburton's observation is learned, but rather too subtle; Sir T. Hanmer's alteration is merely arbitrary. The passage is confessedly obscure, and therefore I may offer another expla The bravest questant shrinks, find what you seek, 2 Lord. Health, at your bidding, serve your majesty! Both. Our hearts receive your warnings. King. Farewel.-Come hither to me. [The King retires to a couch. 1 Lord. O my sweet lord, that you will stay behind us! Par. 'Tis not his fault; the spark 2 Lord. O, 'tis brave wars! nation. I am of opinion that the epithet higher is to be understood of situation rather than of dignity. The sense may then be this: Let upper Italy, where you are to exercise your valour, see that you come to gain honour, to the abatement, that is, to the disgrace and depression of those that have now lost their ancient military fame, and inherit but the fall of the last monarchy. To abate is used by Shakspeare in the original sense of abatre, to depress, to sink, to deject, to subdue. So, in Coriolanus: till ignorance deliver you, "As most abated captives to some nation And bated is used in a kindred sense in The Merchant of Venice: in a bondman's key, "With bated breath, and whisp'ring humbleness." The word has still the same meaning in the language of the law. Johnson. In confirmation of Johnson's opinion, that higher relates to situation, not to dignity, we find, in the third scene of the fourth Act, that one of the Lords says: "What will Count Rousillon do then? will he travel higher, or return again to France?" M. Mason. Those 'bated may here signify "those being taken away or excepted." Bate, thus contracted, is in colloquial language still used with this meaning. This parenthetical sentence implies no more than they excepted who possess modern Italy, the remains of the Roman empire. H. White. 9 That fame may cry you loud:] So, in Troilus and Cressida: -fame with her loud'st O yes, 1 66 "Cries, This is he." Steevens. beware of being captives, Before you serve.] The word serve is equivocal; the sense is, Be not captives before you serve in the war. Be not captives before u are soldiers. Johnson. |