in love; yea, he loveth. Assist me some extemporal god of rhyme, for, I am sure, I shall turn sonneteer. Devise wit; write pen; for I am for whole volumes in folio. [Exit. ACT II. SCENE I. Another part of the same. A Pavilion and Tents at a distance. Enter the Princess of France, ROSALINE, MARIA, KATHARINE, BOYET, Lords, and other Attend ants. BOYET. Now, madam, summon up your dearest spirits :" Consider who the king your father sends; 7 * sonneteer.] The old copies read only-sonnet. The emendation is Sir T. Hanmer's. MALONE. STEEVENS. your dearest spirits:] Dear, in our author's language, has many shades of meaning. In the present instance and the next, it appears to signify-best, most powerful. STEEVENS. D2 PRIN. Good lord Boyet, my beauty, though but mean, Needs not the painted flourish of your praise; 9 * Needs not the painted flourish of your praise;] Rowe has borrowed and dignified this sentiment in his Royal Convert. The Saxon Princess is the speaker: "Whate'er I am " Is of myself, by native worth existing, "Secure, and independent of thy praise: " Nor let it seem too proud a boast, if minds " By nature great, are conscious of their greatness, " And hold it mean to borrow aught from flattery." " Fucati sermonis opem mens conscia laudis • Beauty is bought by judgment of the eye, Not utter'd by base sale of chapmen's tongues:] So, in our author's 102d Sonnet: "That love is merchandiz'd, whose rich esteeming MALONE. Chapman here seems to signify the seller, not, as now commonly, the buyer. Cheap or cheaping was anciently the market; chapman therefore is marketman. The meaning is, that the estimation of beauty depends not on the uttering or proclamation of the seller, but on the eye of the buyer. JOHNSON. To know his pleasure; and in that behalf, Bor. Proud of employment, willingly I go. [Exit. PRIN. All pride is willing pride, and yours is SO. Who are the votaries, my loving lords, 1 LORD. Longaville 2 is one. PRIN. Know you the man? MAR. I know him, madam; at a marriage feast, Between lord Perigort and the beauteous heir Of Jaques Falconbridge solémnized, In Normandy saw I this Longaville : A man of sovereign parts he is esteem'd; 3 1 Bold of your worthiness,] i. e. confident of it. STEEVENS. * Longaville - For the sake of manners as well as metre, we ought to read-Lord Longaville-. STEEVENS. 3 A man of sovereign parts he is esteem'd;] Thus the folio. The first quarto, 1598, has the line thus: " A man of sovereign peerlesse, he's esteem'd." I believe, the author wrote: "A man of,-sovereign, peerless, he's esteem'd." A man of extraordinary accomplishments, the speaker perhaps would have said, but suddenly checks herself; and adds-" sovereign, peerless he's esteem'd." So, before: "Matchless Navarre." Again, in The Tempest: 66 - but you, O you, " So perfect, and so peerless are created." In the old copies no attention seems to have been given to Well fitted in the arts, glorious in arms : : PRIN. Such short-liv'd wits do wither as they grow. Who are the rest? KATH. The young Dumain, a well-accomplish'd youth, Of all that virtue love for virtue lov'd: abrupt sentences. They are almost uniformly printed corruptly, without any mark of abruption. Thus, in Much Ado about Nothing, we find both in the folio and quarto: " - but for the stuffing well, we are all mortal." See Vol. VI. p. 11. See also p. 219, ibid: " Sir, mock me not:-your story." Perhaps our author wrote: MALONE. " A man, a sovereign pearl, he is esteem'd." i. e. not only a pearl, but such a one as is pre-eminently valuable. In Troilus and Cressida Helen is called " a pearl;" and in Macbeth the nobles of Scotland are styled "the kingdom's pearl."-The phrase " a sovereign pearl" may also be countenanced by-" captain jewels in a carcanet," an expression which occurs in one of our author's Sonnets. Sovereign parts, however, is a kin to royalty of nature, a phrase that occurs in Macbeth. STEEVENS. * Well fitted in the arts,] Well fitted is well qualified. JOHNSON. The, which is not in the old copies, was added for the sake of the metre, by the editor of the second folio. MALONE. - match'd with-] Is combined or joined with. JOHNSON. Most power to do most harm, least knowing ill; Ros. Another of these students at that time PRIN. God bless my ladies! are they all in love; MAR. Here comes Boyet. PRIN. Re-enter BOYET. Now, what admittance, lord? BOYET. Navarre had notice of your fair approach; And he, and his competitors in oath, * And much too little &c.] i. e. And my report of the good I saw, is much too little compared to his great worthiness. HEATH. competitors in oath,] i. e. confederates. So, in Antony 7 and Cleopatra: "It is not Cæsar's natural vice to hate "Our great competitor." STEEVENS. |