"Dost thou love? O, I know thou wilt say, ay." This expletive, we shall presently find, when I come to speak of the poet's metre, was his constant expedient in all difficulties. In Measure for Measure he printed ignominy instead of ignomy, the reading of the first folio, and the common language of the time. In the same play, from his ignorance of the constable's humour, he corrected his phraseology, and substituted instant for distant; (" - at that very distant time:") and in like manner he makes Dogberry, in Much Ado about Nothing, exhort the watch not to be vigitant, but vigilant. Among the marks of love, Rosalind, in As you like it, mentions "a beard neglected, which you have not;-but I pardon you for that; for, simply, your having in beard is a younger brother's revenue." Not understanding the meaning of the word having, this editor reads" your having no beard," &c. In A Midsummer-Night's Dream, Pyramus says, " I see a voice; now will I to the chink, " To spy an' I can hear my Thisby's face." Of the humour of this passage he had not the least notion, for he printed, instead of it, " I hear a voice; now will I to the chink, " To spy an' I can see my Thisby's face." In The Merchant of Venice, Act I. sc. i. we find in the first folio, " And out of doubt you do more wrong-" which the editor of the second perceiving to be imperfect, he corrected at random thus : " And out of doubt you do to me more wrong." Had he consulted the original quarto, he would have found that the poet wrote "And out of doubt you do me now more wrong." So, in the same play, -" But of mine, then yours," being corruptly printed instead of "But if mine, then yours," this editor arbitrarily reads"But first mine, then yours." Again, ibidem: "Or even as well use question with the wolf, the words "Why he hath made" being omitted in the first folio at the beginning of the second line, the second folio editor supplied the defect thus absurdly: " Or even as well use question with the wolf, In Othello the word snipe being misprinted in the first folio, " If I should time expend with such a snpe." the editor not knowing what to make of it, substituted swain instead of the corrupted word. Again, in the same play, " For of my heart those charms, thine eyes, are blotted." being printed in the first folio instead of" Forth of my heart," &c. which was the common language of the time, the editor of the second folio amended the error according to his fancy, by reading "For off my heart those charms, thine eyes, are blotted." Again, in the same play, Act V. sc. i. not understanding the phraseology of our author's time, "Who's there? Whose noise is this, that cries on murder?" he substituted " Whose noise is this, that cries out murder?" and in the first Act of the same play, not perceiving the force of an eminently beautiful epithet, for " desarts idle," he has given us " desarts wild." Again, in that tragedy we find that is, I won his daughter with; and so the editor of the second folio reads, not knowing that this kind of elliptical expression frequently occurs in this author's works, as I have shown in a note on the last scene of Cymbeline, and in other places. In like manner he has corrupted the following passage in A Midsummer-Night's Dream : " So will I grow, so live, so die, my lord, i. e. to give sovereignty to. Here too this editor has unnecessarily tampered with the text, and having contracted the word unwished, he exhibited the line thus: * See Vol. XVIII. p. 647, n. 2; Vol. XV. p. 196, n. 4; and Vol. XIX. p. 266, n. 7. "Unto his lordship, to whose unwish'd yoke an interpolation which was adopted in the subsequent copies, and which, with all the modern editors, I incautiously suffered to remain in the present edition. The grave-digger in Hamlet observes " that your tanner will last you nine year," and such is the phraseology which Shakspeare always attributes to his lower characters; but instead of this, in the second folio, we find-" nine years." " Your skill shall, like a star i'the darkest night, says Hamlet to Laertes. But the editor of the second folio, conceiving, I suppose, that if a star appeared with extraordinary scintillation, the night must necessarily be luminous, reads " i'the brightest night:" and, with equal sagacity, not acquiescing in Edgar's notion of "four-inch'd bridges," this editor has furnished him with a much safer pass, for he reads " four-arch'd bridges." In King Henry VIII. are these lines: "His contemplation were above the earth-" Not understanding this phraseology, and supposing that were must require a noun in the plural num. ber, he reads: • See Vol. IV. p. 322, n. 7. "His contemplations were above the earth," &c. Again, in Troilus and Cressida, Act IV. sc. ii : " With wings more momentary-swift than thought." This compound epithet not being understood, he reads: " With wings more momentary, swifter than thought." In The Taming of the Shrew, Act I. sc. ii. Hortensio, describing Catharine, says, "Her only fault (and that is-faults enough) meaning, that this one was a host of faults. But this not being comprehended by the editor of the second folio, with a view, doubtless, of rendering the passage more grammatical, he substituted" and that is fault enough." So, in King Lear, we find "Do you know this noble gentleman?" But this editor supposing, it should seem, that a gentleman could not be noble, or that a noble could not be a gentleman, instead of the original text, reads" Do you know this nobleman?"و In Measure for Measure, Act II. sc. i. Escalus, addressing the Justice, says, "I pray you home to dinner with me:" this familiar diction not being understood, we find in the second folio, " I pray you go home to dinner with me." And in Othello, not having sagacity enough to see that apines was printed by a mere transposition of the letters, for paines, "Though I do hate him, as I do hell apines," |