Give guess how near to day.-Lucius, I say!— Enter LUCIUS. Luc. Call'd you, my lord? BRU. Get me a taper in my study, Lucius: When it is lighted, come and call me here. Luc. I will, my lord. [Exit. BRU. It must be by his death: and, for my part, of Queen Elizabeth any other garden but an orchard; and hence the latter word was considered as synonymous to the former. MALONE. The number of treatises written on the subject of horticulture, even at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign, very strongly controvert Mr. Malone's supposition relative to the unfrequency of gardens at so early a period. STEEVENS. Orchard was anciently written hort-yard; hence its original meaning is obvious. HENLEY. A By the following quotation, however, it will appear that these words had in the days of Shakspeare acquired a distinct meaning. "It shall be good to have understanding of the ground where ye do plant either orchard or garden with fruite." Booke of the Arte and Maner howe to plant and graffe all Sortes of Trees, &c. 1574, 4to. And when Justice Shallow invites Falstaff to see his orchard, where they are to eat a last year's pippin of his own graffing, he certainly uses the word in its present acceptation. Leland also, in his Itinerary, distinguishes them: "At Morle in Derbyshire (says he) there is as much pleasure of orchards of great variety of frute, and fair made walks, and gardens, as in any place of Lancashire." HOLT WHITE. 7 When, Lucius, when?] This exclamation, indicating impatience, has already occurred in King Richard II: "When, Harry, when?" STEevens. See Vol. XI. p. 12, n. 5. MALOne. I know no personal cause to spurn at him, It is the bright day, that brings forth the adder; And then, I grant, we put a sting in him, 8 I have not known when his affections sway'd Remorse from power:] Remorse, for mercy. WARBURTON. Remorse (says Mr. Heath) signifies the conscious uneasiness arising from a sense of having done wrong; to extinguish which feeling, nothing hath so great a tendency as absolute uncontrouled power. I think Warburton right. JOHNSON. Remorse is pity, tenderness; and has twice occurred in that sense in Measure for Measure. See Vol. VI. p. 250, n. 7; and p. 388, n. 5. The same word occurs in Othello, and several other of our author's dramas, with the same signification. STEEVENS. 9 — common proof,] Common experiment. JOHNSon. Common proof means a matter proved by common experience. With great deference to Johnson, I cannot think that the word experiment will bear that meaning. M. MASON. 1 But when he once attains the upmost round, He then unto the ladder turns his back, &c.] So, in Daniel's Civil Wars, 1602: Looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees? By which he did ascend: So Cæsar may; Then, lest he may, prevent. And, since the quarrel Fashion it thus; that what he is, augmented, And kill him in the shell. Re-enter Lucius. Luc. The taper burneth in your closet, sir. 2 "The aspirer, once attain❜d unto the top, base degrees-] Low steps. JOHNSON. So, in Ben Jonson's Sejanus: MALONE. "Whom when he saw lie spread on the degrees.” 3 as his kind,] According to his nature. STEEVENS. JOHNSON. So, in Antony and Cleopatra: "You must think this, look you, the worm [i. e. serpent] will do his kind." STEEVENS. As his kind does not mean, according to his nature, as Johnson asserts, but like the rest of his species. M. MASON. Perhaps rather, as all those of his kind, that is, nature. MALONE. Is not to-morrow, boy, the ides of March ?4 Luc. I know not, sir. BRU. Look in the calendar, and bring me word. Luc. I will, sir. [Exit. BRU, The exhalations, whizzing in the air, Give so much light, that I may read by them. [Opens the Letter, and reads. Such instigations have been often dropp'd Shall Rome &c. Thus must I piece it out; Shall Rome stand under one man's awe? What! My ancestors did from the streets of Rome * Is not to-morrow, boy, the ides of March?] [Old copythe first of March.] We should read ides: for we can never suppose the speaker to have lost fourteen days in his account. He is here plainly ruminating on what the Soothsayer told Cæsar [Act I. sc. ii.] in his presence. [-Beware the ides of March.] The boy comes back and says, Sir, March is wasted fourteen days. So that the morrow was the ides of March, as he supposed. For March, May, July, and October, had six nones each, so that the fifteenth of March was the ides of that month. WARBURTON. The correction was made by Mr. Theobald. The error must have been that of a transcriber or printer; for our author without any minute calculation might have found the ides, nones, and kalends, opposite the respective days of the month, in the Almanacks of the time. In Hopton's Concordancie of Yeares, 1616, now before me, opposite to the fifteenth of March is printed Idus. MALONE. Am I entreated then-] The adverb then, which enforces the question, and is necessary to the metre, was judiciously supplied by Sir Thomas Hanmer. So, in King Richard III: wilt thou then "Spurn at his edict? STEEVENS. To speak, and strike? O Rome! I make thee pro mise, If the redress will follow, thou receivest Re-enter LUCIUS. Luc. Sir, March is wasted fourteen days.* [Knock within. BRU. 'Tis good. Go to the gate; somebody knocks. [Exit LUCIUS Since Cassius first did whet me against Cæsar, I have not slept. Between the acting of a dreadful thing And the first motion,7 all the interim is March is wasted fourteen days.] In former editions: Sir, March is wasted fifteen days. The editors are slightly mistaken: it was wasted but fourteen days: this was the dawn of the 15th, when the boy makes his report. THEOBALD. 7 Between the acting of a dreadful thing And the first motion, &c.] That nice critick, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, complains, that of all kind of beauties, those great strokes which he calls the terrible graces, and which are so frequent in Homer, are the rarest to be found in the following writers. Amongst our countrymen, it seems to be as much confined to the British Homer. This description of the condition of conspirators, before the execution of their design, has a pomp and terror in it that perfectly astonishes. The excellent Mr. Addison, whose modesty made him sometimes diffident of his own genius, but whose true judgment always led him to the safest guides, (as we may see by those fine strokes in his Cato borrowed from the Philippics of Cicero,) has paraphrased this fine description; but we are no longer to expect those terrible graces which animate his original: "O think, what anxious moments pass between "Fill'd up with horror all, and big with death." Cato. |