As is the ouze and bottom of the fea Exe. Then with Scotland firft begin. For once the eagle England being in prey, 4 To taint, and havock, more than fhe can eat, Ely. It follows then, the cat must stay at home, i. e. captures, booty. Without this there is neither beauty nor likeness in the fimilitude. WARBURTON. The change of praise to prize, I believe no body will approve; the fimilitude between the chronicle and fea confifts only in this, that they are both full, and filled with fomething valuable. Befides, Dr. WARBURTON prefuppofes a reading which exifts in no ancient copy, for his chronicle as the later editions give it, the quarto has your, the folio their chronicle. Your and their written by contraction y are juft alike, and her in the old hands is not much unlike y'. I believe we fhould read her chronicie. JOHNSON. -and fumlefs treafuries.] The quarto 1608 reads, and fhipless treafury. STEEVENS. 2 Ely. But there's a faying, &c.] This fpeech, which is dif fuafive of war with France, is abfurdly given to one of the churchmen in confederacy to push the king upon it, as appears by the firft fcene of this act. Befides, the poet had here an eye to Hall, who gives this obfervation to the duke of Exeter. But the editors have made Ely and Exeter change fides, and speak one another's fpeeches; for this, which is given to Ely, is Exeter's; and the following given to Exeter, is Ely's. WARBURTON. 3 If that you will France win, &c.] Hall's Chronicle. Hen. V. year 2. fol. 7. p. 2. x. РОРЕ. 4 To tear and havock more than he can eat.] It is not much the quality of the moufe to tear the food it comes at, but to run over and defile it. The old quarto reads, Spoile; and the two firft folios, tame: from which laft corrupted word, I think, I have retrieved the poet's genuine reading, taint. THEOBALD., Yet 5 Yet that is but a curs'd neceffity; Since we have locks to fafeguard neceffaries, 7 For government, though high, and low, and lower, Cant. True. Therefore doth heaven divide * Setting endeavour in continual motion; Το The 5 Yet that is but a curs'd neceffity;] So the old quarto. folios read crush'd: neither of the words convey any tolerable idea, but give us a counter-reafoning, and not at all pertinent. We fhould read, 'fcus'd neceffity. It is Ely's bufinefs to fhew, there is no real neceffity for ftaying at home: he must therefore mean, that though there be a feeming neceffity, yet it is one that may be well excus'd and got over. WARB. Neither the old readings nor the emendation feem very fatiffactory. A curfed neceffity has no fenfe; a 'fcus'd necefity is fo harfh that one would not admit it, if any thing elfe can be found. A crush'd neceffity may mean, a neceffity which is fubdued and over-powered by contrary reasons. We might read a crude neceffity, a neceffity not complete, or not well confidered and digefted, but it is too harsh. Sir T. HANMER reads, Yet that is not o'courfe a neceffity. JOHNSON. A curs'd neceflity means, I believe, only an unfortunate neceffity. Curs'd, in colloquial phrafe, means any thing unfortunate. So we fay, fuch a one leads a curfed life; another has got into a curfed fcrape. STEEVENS. And pretty traps] Thus the old copy; but I believe we should read petty. STEEVENS. 7 For government, though high, and low, and lower.] The foundation and expreffion of this thought feems to be borrow'd from Cicero de Republica, lib. z. Sic ex fummis, & mediis, & infimis interjectis ordinibus, ut fonis, moderatam ratione civitatem. Confenfu diffimiliorum concinere; & que harmonia à muficis dicitur in cantu, eam effe in civitate concordiam. THEOB. Setting endeavour in continual motion; 8 To which is fixed, as an aim or butt, Obedience.-] Neither the fenfe nor the conftruction of this To which is fixed, as an aim or butt, Who, bufy'd in his majefty, furveys paffage is very obvious. The conftruction is, endeavour as an aim or butt to which endeavour, obedience is fixed. The fenfe is, that all endeavour is to terminate in obedience, to be fubordinate to the publick good and general defign of government. JOHNSON. 9 Others, like merchants, VENTURE trade abroad;] What is the venturing trade? I am perfuaded we should read and point it thus, WARB, Others, like merchant venturers, trade abroad. If the whole difficulty of this paffage confifts in the obfcurity of the phrafe to venture trade, it may be eafily cleared. To venture trade is a phrafe of the fame import and ftructure as to bazard battle. Nothing could have raifed an objection but the defire of being bufy. JOHNSON. The civil tizens KNEADING up the honey;] This may poffibly be right; but I rather think that Shakespeare wrote HEADING up the honey; alluding to the putting up merchandife in calks. And this is in fact the cafe. The honey being headed up in feparate and diftinct cells by a thin membrane of wax drawn over the mouth of each of them, to hinder the liquid matter from running out. WARBURTON. To head the Leny can hardly be right; for though we head the calk, no man talks of heading the commodities. T knead gives an eafy fenfe, though not phyfically true. The bees do in fact knead the wax more than the honey, but that Shakefpeare perhaps did not know. JOHNSON. The old quarto reads, lading up the honey. STEEVENS. Their heavy burdens at his narrow gate; As many feveral ways meet in one town; So may a thousand actions, once a-foot, K. Henry. Call in the meffengers fent from the Now are we well refolv'd: and, by God's help 2 So may a thousand actions, ONCE a-foot,] The freaker is en deavouring to fhew, that the flate is able to execute many projected actions at once, and conduct them all to their comp.etion, without impeding or joling one another in their couric. Shakespeare, therefore, mult have wrote, actions 't once a foot, i. e. at once; or, on foot together. WARBURTON. Sir T. HANMER is more kind to this emendation by reading at at once. The change is not neceffary, the old text may ftand. JOHNSON. 3 Without defeat.-] The quarto 1608 reads, Without defect. O'er France, and all her almost kingly dukedoms, Enter ambaffadors of France. Now we are well prepar'd to know the pleasure K. Henry. We are no tyrant, but a Chriftian king, Amb. Thus then, in few. Your highnefs, lately fending into France, your great predeceffor, king Edward the third; with a waxen epitaph.] The quarto 1608 reads, with a paper epitaph. STEEVENS. This reading is more unintelligible, to me at least, than the ther: a grave not dignified with the flightest memorial. JOHNSON. |