Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III.

Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III.

  As matter whole you have to make it with.

Without doubt erroneously; I therefore only observe it, that the reader may more readily admit the liberties which the editors of this authour’s works have necessarily taken.

II.ii.61 (144,1) fronted] i.e. opposed.

II.ii.85 (145,4) The honour’s sacred which he talks on now,/Supposing that I lack’d it] [Sacred, for unbroken, unviolated.  WARB.] Dr. Warburton seems to understand this passage thus; The honour which he talks of me as lacking, is unviolated, I never lacked it.  This may perhaps be the true meaning, but before I read the note, I understood it thus:  Lepidus interrupts Caesar, on the supposition that what he is about to say will be too harsh to be endured by Antony; to which Antony replies, No, Lepidus, let him speak, the security of honour on which he now speaks, on which this conference is held now, is sacred, even supposing that I lacked honour before.

II.ii.112 (146,5) your considerate stone] This line is passed by all the editors, as if they understood it, and believed it universally, intelligible.  I cannot find in it any very obvious, and hardly any possible meaning.  I would therefore read,

  Go to then, you considerate ones.

You, who dislike my frankness and temerity of speech, and are so considerate and discreet, go to, do your on business.

II.ii.113 (146,6) I do not much dislike the matter, but/The manner of his speech] I do not, says Caesar, think the man wrong, but too free of him interposition; for’t cannot be, we shall remain in friendship:  yet if it were possible, I would endeavour it.

II.ii.123 (147,7) your reproof/Were well deserv’d] In the old edition,

  —­your proof
  Were well deserv’d—­

Which Mr. Theobald, with his usual triumph, changes to approof, which he explains, allowance.  Dr. Warburton inserted reproof very properly into Hanmer’s edition, but forgot it in his own.

II.ii.159 (148,8) Lest my remembrance suffer ill report] Lest I be thought too willing to forget benefits, I must barely return him thanks, and then I will defy him.

II.ii.210 (150,1) And what they undid, did] It might be read less harshly,

  And what they did, undid.

II.ii.212 (150,2) tended her i’ the eyes] Perhaps tended her by th’ eyes, discovered her will by her eyes.

II.iii.21 (153,6) thy angel/Becomes a Fear] Mr.Uptan reads,

  Becomes afear’d,—­

The common reading is more poetical.

II.iii.37 (154,7) his quails ever/Beat mine] The ancients used to match quails as we match cocks.

II.iii.38 (154,8) inhoop’d, at odds] Thus the old copy. Inhoop’d is inclosed, confined, that they may fight.  The modern editions read,

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Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.