Cymbeline
Cymbeline
Cymbeline
https://books.google.com
13477.8.6
VERI
TAS
FROM THE
KENNETH MATHESON TAYLOR
FUND
GIVEN IN 1899 BY
JESSIE TAYLOR PHILIPS
IN MEMORY OF HER BROTHER
KENNETH MATHESON TAYLOR
(Class of 1890)
FOR ENGLISH LITERATURE
THE ARDEN SHAKESPEARE
CYMBELINE
THE WORKS
OF
SHAKESPEARE
CYMBELINE
EDITED BY
EDWARD DOWDEN
LONDON
1903 ,:
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION PAGE
vii
CYMBELINE I
•
ADDITIONAL NOTE 212
1345.8.6
Jaylor fund.
INTRODUCTION
serenity, which seem to render the name ' comedies ' inap-
propriate ; we may smile tenderly, but we never laugh
loudly, as we read them."
In one of the most interesting and suggestive of recent
studies in Elizabethan drama, Professor Thorndike's The
Influence of Beaumont and Fletcher on Shakspere,¹ the
writer gives in summary the results of his examination of
the " General Characteristics of Shakspere's Romances," as
follows :-
older parts of the scene " (p. 246) . To this view Mr. Fleay
adheres in his Chronicle of the English Drama ( 1891 ),
adding that, as we have it, " the play has been touched up
by a second hand," and that " perhaps it was not finished
for the stage till after Shakespeare's retirement.”
I do not feel that there is a want of consistency in the
character of Cloten, at least to the degree imagined by Mr.
Fleay. Cloten is a fool, but not a fool absolute. Wherever
his personal vanity is concerned, he shows his dulness and
grossness. Where for a moment he escapes from his heavy
egoism , he shows that he is not quite brainless. And in
this there is no greater inconsistency than may be found
in human nature. Miss Seward declared that she knew in
real life an exact replica of Cloten. Whether Shakespeare,
when he completed Cymbeline, had retired from the stage, as
Mr. Fleay supposes, we cannot certainly say ; but perhaps
an indication that he was well informed as to the resources
of his company may be found in this-that he offers an
apology, or something like an apology , for the fact that the
song " Fear no more the heat o' the sun " is not sung but
spoken. Perhaps the actors who took the parts of
Guiderius and Arviragus could not have rendered the
song successfully ; and perhaps it was on this account
that the stage Guiderius informs his brother that grief
has overpowered him, and that he can only " weep and
word it."
the debt, and instantly sets out for Italy. When some
twenty miles from Genoa, he despatches a servant to
Ginevra with letters informing her of his return, and
bidding her come to him. At the same time he charges
the servant to slay her on the road. On learning the true
purpose of her journey, Ginevra pleads her innocence, and
induces the servant to take her clothes in evidence of the
assertion that she had been slain, and to leave with her his
hat and doublet as a disguise ; she promises that she shall
never be heard of more.
went (with the King's leave) home, where they were kindly
welcomed by George, to whom for recompence he gave the
money which he received . So lived they ever after in great
content."
That is to say, ' I tell you truly that I boast that I know
no woman living, but if I might speak to her twice, at the
third time I might have all my desire.' Iachimo (Cym-
beline, Act I. sc. v.) says, " With no more advantage than
the opportunity of a second conference, and I will bring you
from thence that honour of hers which you imagine so
reserved .' This is found neither in Boccaccio nor in
Westward for Smelts.
"Again, in the French miracle-play, Berengier, endeavour-
ing to work upon the jealousy of Denise , tells her,
De Romme vien, ou j'ay laissié
Vostre seigneur, qui ne vous prise
Pas la queue d'une serise ;
D'une garce c'est acointié
Qu'il a en si grant amistié
Qu'il ne scet de elle departir,
INTRODUCTION xxxiii
ie. ' I come from Rome, where I left your lord, who does
not value you the stalk of a cherry ; he is connected with
a girl for whom he has so strong a regard , that he knows
not how to part from her.' The passage where Iachimo
represents the manner in which Posthumus in Rome spends
his revenues upon depraved women will readily occur to all,
and no corresponding inducement is to be met with in the
Italian novelist, nor in the English imitator."
The oldest German and Scandinavian stories of The
Four Merchants ; or, The Virtuous Wife, Mr. Gollancz tells
us (Introduction to Cymbeline, Temple Shakespeare), “ were
derived from the French rather than from the Italian." He
Through thicke and thin, all night, all day, she drived,
Withouten comfort, company, or guide,
Her plaints and tears with every thought revived,
She heard and saw her griefes, but nought beside.
Tasso, and hints, as Mr. Craig also suggests, for the Perdita
of his Winter's Tale in Spenser's Pastorella of the sixth
book of the Faerie Queene. And perhaps our fancy may
have been a fact. Who can tell ?
" Fidele," Shakespeare did not stand upon points like this.
Many examples of what an eighteenth -century critic might
describe as our poet's inexactitude in details could be
cited.
4. Act II. sc. ii . in part, and sc. iii. [ Act. III. sc. i.
also belongs to this day].
An Interval. Iachimo's return journey to
Rome.
"" 5. Act II. sc. iv. and v.
An Interval. Time for Posthumus's letters
from Rome to arrive in Britain.
[Act III. sc. i. See Day No. 4.]
6. Act III. sc. ii. and iii.
An Interval, including one clear day. Imogen
and Pisanio journey to Wales.
INTRODUCTION xli
APPARITIONS.
2
CYMBELINE
ACT I
First Gent. You do not meet a man but frowns : our bloods
No more obey the heavens than our courtiers
Still seem as does the king.
Sec. Gent. But what's the matter ?
First Gent. His daughter, and the heir of's kingdom, whom
He purposed to his wife's sole son- a widow 5
That late he married-hath referr'd herself
59. ] Pointing, Rowe ; cloathes, the other from F. 70. ] Scena Secunda Ff ;
as here, Rowe.
Re-enter QUEEN.
97. Rome] Keightley, " Rome's. " him, in order that he and she may be
104-106. I never • offences] The friends again. Daniel conjectured, and
Queen has disobeyed the King (see lines Hudson reads : " injuries ; to be friends,
151 , 152) ; but he feebly heaps kind- Pays."
nesses upon her when she has injured
10 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
116. sear up] As the meaning has 117. bonds] Grant White reads "cere"
been disputed, it seems better to print and " bands "; " bonds " and " bands "
" sear " (F " seare") than the more usual are variations of one and the same
and more correct " cere," But it ought word : "bonds of death," cere-cloths.
not to be questioned that “ sear is 118. it on] Pope, " thee on " ; but,
identical with " cere," to wrap in a as Malone notes, a change of persons
cerecloth. So Tourneur, Revenger's occurs elsewhere in this and other
Tragedy, I. ii. " The bowel'd corpse وو105. White
plays ; e.g. III. iii. 104,
May be seard in." Some commen- conjectured " it own,' that is, " its
tators have taken " sear " to mean own. Malone supposed-surely er-
"close by burning " (as a wound is roneously-that " keep on " here meant
closed). Clarke suggests that sear "" " maintain its [sense's] operations. ”
expresses the dry withering of death as 124. see] The same words occur in
well as the wrapping in cerecloths. Troilus and Cressida, IV. iv. 59 ; so
Eccles conjectured "seal," which Henry VIII. I. i. 2 : " How have ye
Singer adopts. done Since last we saw in France ? "
強
SC. I. ] CYMBELINE 11
also " wound, " is frequent in Shake- 140. puttock] kite, a base kind of
speare. hawk, as in 2 Henry VI. III. ii. 191 .
137. that way, past grace] Cotgrave Shakespeare varies the old saying to
has "s'Eshonter, to choose between hawk and buzzard."
999be shamelesse ...
to be ' past grace.' Imogen (with a 141. beggar; wouldst] F has a comma
66
play on grace ") compares herself to instead of a semicolon. Collier (MS. )
one who, suffering from religious de- has " beggar would. "
spair, believes himself past the power 146. overbuys me] I am worth but
of divine grace. " Desperation is an a small fraction of what, in giving him-
evill through which a man mistrusteth, self, he has given for me ; overbuys me
despaireth utterly, and is past all hope by nearly all the sum he pays. See
of the good will of God " (W. Willi- " Almost " in New Eng. Dict.
mat, 1605).
SC. I. ] CYMBELINE 13
Re-enter QUEEN .
Enter PISANIO.
Imo. I would thou grew'st unto the shores o' the haven,
And question'dst every sail : if he should write
And I not have it, 'twere a paper lost,
As offer'd mercy is. What was the last
That he spake to thee ?
Pis. It was, his queen, his queen ! 5
Imo. Then waved his handkerchief?
Pis. And kiss'd it, madam.
40. You'llgo] Capell makes the reply Lord, taking " go together " metaphori-,,
to this speech come from Second Lord ; cally, " make a match or form a pair
Delius conjectures that " Well, my (see line 32), adds a sarcastic " Well,"
lord," is spoken by First Lord. I think i.e. you are an excellent match.
Cloten addresses the Second Lord, who
is not eager to reply ; First Lord inter- Scene III.
venes with his assurance of attendance ;
Cloten still presses for the company of 4. offer'd mercy] Steevens : " a par-
Second Lord, who then submits with a don to a condemned criminal," com-
reluctant "Well, my lord." Vaughan, paring All's Well, v. iii. 58 : " Like
perhaps rightly, takes " You'll go " as a remorseful pardon slowly carried."
addressed to First Lord, who says he The reference may be to Divine mercy.
will " attend or follow ; Cloten bids For " offer'd " Staunton conjectured
him accompany, not follow ; and Second " deferr'd."
2
18 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
Enter a Lady.
Lady. The queen, madam ,
Desires your highness' company.
23. him ?] Rowe, him. F.
24. vantage] opportunity. 37. Shakes all our buds] Compare
29. shes] as in I. vi. 40 : " two such Sonnets, xviii.: " Rough winds do shake
shes." So Barnfield (ed. Arber, p. 47), the darling buds of May" ; and Romeo
Cynthia: "Was never mortall eye be- and Juliet, II . ii. 121 :
held so faire a Shee." " This bud of love, by summer's
35. charming] having in them a ripening breath,
charm (to preserve him from evil). May prove a beauteous flower when
Compare v. iii. 32. In Scot's Discovery next we meet.
of Witchcraft 66 use charming words' For 66'growing" Warburton has
means use words of incantation. "blowing."
20 CYMBE [ACT I.
LINE
A Dutchman and a Spaniard] mute 263 ; see also Hamlet, v. ii. 118 : " to
dramatis persona, omitted by Rowe ; divide him inventorially would
"" dizzy
but Rome is regarded as a centre for all the arithmetic of memory."
nations. 10. without and within] Compare
2. crescent note] growing distinction. " All of her that is out of door most
Compare I. vi. 22 : " He is one of the rich, " 1. vi. 15. "9
noblest note. 12. behold the sun] Perhaps " as he'19
5. help of admiration] A difficulty refers to Iachimo, and if so " the sun
has been imagined here by Ingleby. must stand ironically for Posthumus ;
Iachimo says, " I was able to view him, but " he " may be Posthumus, and the
without the stare of wonder," "ad- meaning may be, we had many eagles
miration " probably (as in 1. vi. 37) as true of breed as he. Compare
meaning wonder, astonishment. We 3 Henry VI. II. i. 91 , 92 : " Nay, if
do not need Staunton's proposed " yelp thou be that princely eagle's bird,
ofadmiration." For the " catalogue ,' Show thy descent by gazing ' gainst the
Delius compares Twelfth Night, 1. v. sun. ""
SC. IV.] CYMBELINE 21
Enter POSTHUMUS .
28. Briton] Theobald, Britaine F. 30. Enter Posthumus] Dyce, after life,
line 27, F.
30. knowing] knowledge, as in II. iii. " Which I new pay as if not paid
ΙΟΙ . before," and All's Well, III . vii. 16.
34. story] as in Lucrece, line 106 : 42. atone]reconcile, as in Richard II.
"He stories to her ears her husband's I. i. 202.
fame." 43. put together] opposed in com-
36. known] So Antony and Cleopatra, bat. Compare " together " in the line ""
II. vi. 86 : " You and I have known, " Togeder then went these two yeomen
sir," i.e. been acquainted. So Ben Robin Hoodand the Potter, stanza 16.
Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, IV. i. : 45. importance] Explained by several
" He salutes me as familiarly as if editors as matter, "" 66' subject " ; but
we had known together since the the evidence for the meaning assigned
deluge. " by Malone and Steevens, "impor-
39. ever to pay] So Sonnets, xxx.: tunity," " instigation," seems satis-
SC. IV . ] CYMBELINE 23
50. offend not] Rowe, offend F. 62. country mistresses] Theobald, hy-
phened F.
factory. See Twelfth Night ,v. i. 371, I even avoided independent concurrence
and King John, II. i. 7. I am not with their opinions. " But the words
sure that the meaning is different in may mean : Being a young traveller I
Winter's Tale, v. ii. 20. liked to assert an independentjudgment,
47. go even] agree ; so Twelfth Night, while I did not refuse in my actions to
v. i. 246 : " Were you a woman , as be guided by the experience of others ;
the rest goes even.." The sense, though I asserted that the ground of quarrel
carelessly expressed, seems to be : was serious, yet, in fact, I yielded and
Posthumus, then young, instead of made it up ; now my maturer judgment
guiding himself by the experience of regards it as serious.
others, studied to avoid agreement with 54. confounded] destroyed, as often
them. Vaughan, accepting the word in Shakespeare.
"shunned " as running on to " guided," 59. without contradiction ] undoubt-
ingeniously explains : " Rather than edly, as in Antony and Cleopatra, 11.
servilely follow the guidance of others, vii. 41 .
24 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
78. others I] Pope, others. IF. 79, 80. not but] Malone, not F. 91.
purchase] Rowe, purchases F.
79, 80. could not but] For F " could panying idea of pleasure in possession),
not "" Warburton conjectured and as often in Shakespeare.
Hanmer read " could." I think Heath's 87, 88. Either .. trifle] if your
conjecture " could but " is not unlikely lady is not dead (and out of the world),
to be right. Ingleby strains the F you therefore value your stone above
text to get a poor meaning, taking the her. Posthumus answers that "the
words as an admission that Imogen world " may come to enjoy the stone,
may possess great beauty, yet not but never the lady, who is his sole
excel many, because she lacks virtue. possession.
Vaughan thinks F text may mean " she 90. or if] meaning " if either, " but
excelled some ; still there are many the preceding " or " renders a printer's
whom I could not believe her to excel." error not unlikely, and many editors
He considers the passage, however, follow Rowe in reading " if."
corrupt, and would read " others you 92. only the gift] the gift alone.
have seen." 96. in title] the image is from the
86. enjoys] possesses (with the accom- title to an estate.
26 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
122. herein too] For F " heerein to " 134. approbation] confirmation, proof,
White reads " herein-to." Vaughan as in Winter's Tale, II . i. 177.
conjectures "herein, so. " Perhaps 137. whom] as in Tempest, III. iii.
" hereunto," conjectured by an anony- 92 : " Young Ferdinand, whom they
mous critic, is right. suppose is drown'd," and else-
124. abused] deceived, as often. where.
125. you sustain] Rowe reads
"you'd" ; Collier (MS.) , " you 'le."
28 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
144. wage, ] I insert the comma "but I see you have some religion "
after " wage," as proposed by Vaughan ; would then refer sneeringly to the only
"gold to it," gold which will be the part of adoration possessed by Post-
proper match to your gold. humus-fear ; he is " wise, " and the
146. afraid] This, Warburton's con- fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.
jecture for Fa Friend, " is adopted Or "you are a friend " may mean " you
by most editors ; Delius is an excep- have the advantage of me in being her
tion. Ingleby reads " her friend, " intimate, and being so far the wiser,
which Delius had suggested . If you will not risk"" your ring." Collier
"friend " (i.e. " lover ") be right, ( MS . ), " afeard.
Iachimo may mean : "" After all you 153. undergo] take upon me, as in
are a lover, not, as you professed, an III. V. III.
' adorer ' (line 74) ; you know that 159. lay] wager, as in Othello, II. iii.
your goddess is human, and you are 330.
therein the wiser." Iachimo's words
SC. IV. ] CYMBELINE 29
163. yours] To make Iachimo state Wives, II. i. 189 : " If he should intend
both sides of the wager, Hanmer (fol- this voyage towards my wife," and
lowing Warburton) read " mine " in Twelfth Night, III. i. 83-86. Collier
place of " yours, " omitting " no " before (MS. ), " make good your vaun-
"sufficient." But Iachimo cares only tage.
to present the side favourable to Post- 173. debate] quarrel, as often.
humus, and he states it twice over. 174. making it appear] making it
170. make your voyage] The image manifest.
is perhaps from the voyage of a mer- 180. starve] perish through cold
chant adventurer, as in Romeo and ( “ sterve " F), a common meaning of
Juliet, 11. ii. 83, 84. Compare Merry " starve."
30 CYMBELINE
[ACT I.
Enter PISANIO.
78. hand-
fast] F, handfast F 2.
78. hand-fast] So Beaumont and 83. primroses] In F " Prime- Roses, "
Fletcher, Wit at Several Weapons, as in Cotgrave (under Prime-vere), but
v. i.: " I knit this holy ' hand-fast "" ; the etymology from Prima rosa is
used only here by Shakespeare in the erroneous. The Middle Englishprime-
sense of marriage- contract ; in Winter's role is diminutive from primula.
Tale, IV. iv. 795, " in hand-fast " 85. And shalldo] Various proposals to
means in custody. fill out the verse are made. Vaughan's
66
80. liegers] resident ambassadors, as Marry, and shall do so " has at least
in Measure for Measure, III . i. 59. the advantage of avoiding the final
Johnson : a lieger ambassador is one "do," followe "" d by the rhymes " un-
that resides in a foreign court to pro- true, 'you.' I conjecture that the
mote his master's interest. " For Queen's speech ended with " Think on
"sweet " Collier (MS. ) has " suite. " my words, Pisanio," and that the
SC. VI. ] CYMBELINE 35
28. takes] Pope, take F. 32. mad?] mad. F. 37. spectacles] F 3, Spectales F.
72. will his] Rowe, will's F. 72, 73. languish for Assured] Steevens,
languish : For assured F, languish, For assured Ff 2–4.
70. proof] experience. ference to himself alone ; his fault in
72. his 66free hours] commonly ex- regard to you causes both wonder and
plained during his free hours," pity." The meaning I believe to be :
making " languish " intransitive ; but In his own peculiar gifts heaven's
that verb was used transitively ; Florio, bounty is much ; in you-who are his
Montaigne ( 1603), " lest ... he might heaven's bounty to him is beyond all
• • languish that burning flame " ; gifts (or endowments). "Talent " is
"his free hours " may "" here be the used for " gift " by Shakespeare. Mr.
object of " languish.' Craig, however, noticing, what is cer-
73. Assured] In the choice of this tainly the fact, that " talents " was used
word there may have been, as Vaughan by Elizabethan and earlier writers for
suggests, a thought of the sense " inclination, ""' 'desire," would let the
" affianced " ; see King John, 11. i . sense run on to line 81 , and explain :
534, 535, for a play on the two mean- "With respect to you, whom I account
ings of assure. his beyond all reach of loose desires,
79, 80. Be • • talents ] I change Whilst, etc. " See for this sense of
""
the full stop of F after " thankfully " talent" Trench's Select Glossary and
to a colon , and insert a comma after Skeat's Etym. Dict. Palsgrave, Les-
" his," line 80. Many editors alter the clarcissement, has " Talent or lust-""
full stop of F after " talents " to a ' talent "" ; the meaning " inclination
comma . Perhaps such editors would comes from the inclination of the
""
explain , ' the fault is great with re- balance (τάλαντον) .
SC. VI. ] CYMBELINE 41
To pity too.
Imo. What do you pity, sir ?
Iach. Two creatures heartily.
Imo. Am I one, sir ?
You look on me : what wreck discern you in me
Deserves your pity ?
Iach. Lamentable ! What, 85
To hide me from the radiant sun, and solace
I' the dungeon by a snuff?
Imo. I pray you, sir,
Deliver with more openness your answers
To my demands. Why do you pity me ?
Iach. That others do, 90
I was about to say, enjoy your- But
It is an office of the gods to venge it,
Not mine to speak on 't.
Imo. You do seem to know
Something of me, or what concerns me : pray you,
Since doubting things go ill often hurts more 95
Than to be sure they do- for certainties
Either are past remedies, or, timely knowing,
The remedy then born- discover to me
What both you spur and stop .
87. snuff] the wick (as darkeningthe of evils known as certain, yet not
flame). Compare Hamlet, IV. vii. 116. remediless ; upon timely knowledge the
96-98. do . · born-] The dashes remedy is (the " is " being understood
correspond to full stops in F. Many and assumed out of " are ") then born.
editors begin the parenthesis with In 95, " doubting," suspecting, fearing,
" Since," line 95. Some editors read as often.
"known " for " knowing, " and some, 99. What . stop] What thing this
" remedy's " for " remedy. " Vaughan is which you both urge upon me and
takes " timely knowing " as itself "the hold back , half reveal and half con-
remedy " ; but I think Imogen speaks ceal.
42 CYMBELINE [ACT I.
166. witch] used of either sex ; mas- 176. Which] refers to " judgment, "
culine, as here, in Antony and Cleopatra, which had received " confirmation , "
I. ii. 40. " Who can deny him a and which Imogen knows in the elec-
wizard or witch," Cotta, Trial of tion of her husband, cannot be wrong.
Witchcraft, p. 49. Delius refers " which " to " elec-
167. into] unto, as often ; draws tion."
troops of companions to him, as with 177. fan] winnow. Compare Troilus
a charm. For " societies " compare and Cressida, I. iii. 27, and Henry VIII.
Merry Wives, III. iv. 8 : " my wild v. i. III.
societies." 183. lord ;] Dyce places a comma
173. your report] To regulate after " lord, " understanding "for it
the verse Hanmer read " you with a,' concerns your lord, myself, and other
Capell "you by a,'" Steevens omits noble friends, who are partners,"
"of" ; Vaughan would omit "a," com- etc.
paring Much Ado, v. i. 219.
SC. VI. ] CYMBELINE 47
186. best feather] The words are " value's great "-a conjecture ofDyce,
easily intelligible in the modern senses. afterwards withdrawn by him.
Wyatt, however, takes " feather " to 191. curious, being strange] careful,
mean " bird " (as it sometimes does), particular, being a stranger. Compare
and " wing 99 to mean ""' fellowship,' line 54.
quoting Dekker, Bellman of London : 200. short] The meaning of the
66
Of all the mad rascals that are of this adjective " deficient, " ' inadequate,"
wing the Abraham-man is the most as in "to come short," is here trans-
fantastic." ferred to a verb, which Brooke in Romeus
190. values great] Collier, ed. 2, read andJuliet uses in the sense " shorten."
48 CYMBELINE [ACT II.
ACT II
23. bellyful] Capell, bellyfull F. 25. [Aside] Rowe. 26. crow,] Theo-
bald, crow F. 28. your] F 3, you F. 36. to-night] F 2, night F.
66. divorce he'ld make : the] divorce, heel'd make the F. 67. honour ;]
Rowe, Honour. F. 69. Exit] Capell, Exeunt F.
Scene II.
1. woman Helen ? ] F 3, woman : Helene ? F. 7. Exit Lady] Rowe.
IO. Iachimo • • .] Collier, Iachimo from the Trunke F. 22. these] F, the
F 2.
9. fairies] Rolfe : " For malignant lips kiss each other," comparing Venus
fairies compare Hamlet, 1. i. 163, and and Adonis, line 505. Here " dearly "
Comedy ofErrors, 11. ii. 191. " "6 is equivalent to " exquisitely."
12. Our Tarquin] Johnson : 'The 19. Perfumes] Malone compares
speaker is an Italian." Marston, Pygmalion's Image, 1598 ;
66' through which [lips] he thinks doth
13. rushes] The anachronism appears
also in Lucrece, line 318. flie, So sweet a breath that doth per-
14. Cytherea] Vaughan, perhaps fume the air."
rightly, would read " Cytherea ! "-an 20. Bows toward her] Is Shake-
adjuration to the goddess of beauty ; speare varying the vulgar error, dis-
but probably the Cytherea here is cussed by Sir T. Browne ( B. v. c. xxi. ) ,
Imogen. " that smoke doth follow the fairest "?
16. whiter . . . sheets] So Venus 21. lights] Compare Golding's Ovid
and Adonis, line 398 : " Teaching the (ed. 1612, p. 13a) : " thou Argus .
sheets a whiter hue than white," and with all thy hundred lights," i.e. eyes.
Lucrece, line 472. 22. windows] used, as here, for eye-
17. But ... kiss !] Vaughan, per- lids in Romeo and Juliet, IV. i. 100,
haps rightly, would read " But kiss Richard III. v. iii. 116, and elsewhere ;
one kiss," and in the next line " How the eyelids are white with azure veins.
dearly they'd do 't ! " I understand " laced with," etc. , to be
18. do't] give or take kisses. Ingleby an expansion of " azure." Compare
and others suppose it to mean " do her IV. ii. 222, “ the azured harebell, like
54 CYMBELINE
[ACT II.
49. bare . • eye] Steevens (Theobald conj . ), beare the Ravens eye F, Collier
(MS. ) dare, Vaughan conj. clear. 51. Goes .. closes] Rowe (substan-
tially), Exit F.
38. A mole] Malone notes that Shakespeare may have known it through
Shakespeare took this circumstance Ovid's Metamorphoses.
from Boccaccio ; it does not occur in 46. gave up] ceased to resist, suc-
Westward for Smelts. Possibly, in his cumbed.
cowslip comparison, Shakespeare re- 48. dragons] Compare Midsummer
membered Spenser's comparison to a Night's Dream, III. ii. 379 : " For
rose, Faerie Queene, VI. xii. 7 : night's swift dragons cut the clouds
" Upon the little brest like christall full fast " ; and Milton, Il Penseroso,
bright, line 59.
She mote perceive a little purple 49. raven's eye] In Willughby's
mold, Ornithology, 1678, p. 123, I find
That like a rose her silken leaves " Ravens . roost (as they say) upon
did faire unfold." trees, with their bills directed towards
""
38. drops] spots of colour. Topsell the Sun-rising." Drout, Galfrido and
(quotedin New Eng. Dict. ), " Theirbelly Bernabo ( 1570) : " At last the Ravens
is parted with black strakes and drops." did discry Aurora to be neere. "
45. Tereus] Malone notes that the 50. this] i.e. this is, as in Taming
tale is found in A Petite Palace ofPettie ofthe Shrew, 1. ii. 46 (F) , Lear, IV. vi.
his Pleasure, 1576. It is in Ġower's 187, Measurefor Measure, v. i. 131 (F).
Confessio Amantis, Bk. v. , and in 51. time !] Iachimo has heard Imogen
Chaucer's Legende of Good Women. arranging to be called at four. Ingleby
56 CYMBELINE [ACT II.
SONG.
Enter a Messenger.
print of it," and Cymbeline, Iv. iv. " To orderly soliciting ; and, be-
23, 24. Many editors follow Rowe friended
66 out. With aptness of the season, make
49, 50. vantages . . . Prefer]oppor- denials ," etc.
tunities that may commend. i.e. when you are sure that your services
51. solicits] Collier's " soliciting " is are seasonable, let her refusals only
accepted by some editors, and possibly stimulate you to increase them.
the " y" of F " solicity " was the mis- 55. that] Vaughan takes this and
print of a MS. contraction for " ing" what follows to end of speech as de-
following "orderly," the terminal "y pendent on so seem, " making " as if
may have been mechanically repeated you were inspired, " etc. , parenthetic.
by the printer. " Solicit " was specially Perhaps rightly ; this meaning would
used of the requests of a lover ; see be best brought out, I think, by placing
note on Hamlet (ed. Dowden), II. ii. a comma after " so seem," and a comma
126. " Whose strong solicits," occurs after " tender to her. "
in Shirley, The Grateful Servant, 56. dismission] rejection ; used by
II. ii. Milton (see New Eng. Dict. ) of re-
51. be friended] Mason conjectured pudiation of a wife.
" befriended " ; he had been anticipated 57. senseless ] insensible, which Cloten
by Rowe (ed. 2) and by Pope. Vaughan misunderstands as wanting in sense or
would read : intelligence.
60 CYMBELINE [ACT II.
Which makes the true man kill'd and saves the thief; 75
Nay, sometime hangs both thief and true man : what
Can it not do and undo ? I will make
One of her women lawyer to me, for
I yet not understand the case myself.
By your leave. [Knocks. 80
Enter a Lady.
the deer were expected to pass, " tion 1 Henry VI. II . i. 38 : " Enter
Madden, Diary of Master William ... the Bastard of Orleans, Alençon
Silence, p. 236. So Spenser, Faerie and Reignier, half ready, and half un-
Queene, v. viii. 35 : " Where he with ready.' Palsgrave, Lesclarcissement :
boughes hath built his shady stand. " " closet for a lady to make her redy
75. true man] Hyphened in F here in-chamberette. "
and in next line ; "true," honest, as in 85. Ay] Delius conjectures that this
Venus and Adonis, line 724 : " Rich speech and that of the lady immediately
preys make true men thieves. " preceding it (except the last words) are
85. ready] dressed, as in stage-direc- spoken aside.
62 CYMBELINE [ACT II .
Enter IMOGEN.
Imo. But that you shall not say I yield being silent,
I would not speak. I pray you, spare me : faith,
I shall unfold equal discourtesy 100
To your best kindness : one of your great knowing
Should learn, being taught, forbearance.
Clo. To leave you in your madness, ' twere my sin :
I will not .
Imo. Fools are not mad folks.
Enter PISANIO .
140. How now] Hanmer transferred Pope read " kissed, " a dissyllable. Of
these words to Cloten. So Walker, several proposals perhaps the best is
conjecturing "How ! how !" Vaughan's : " I saw ' t last night ; 'twas
142. presently] instantly, as often in on mine arm , I kiss'd it. " He con-
Shakespeare. jectures that the words " I saw 't
143. sprited] haunted (as by a spirit). dropped out, as a supposed error caught
150. ] To add a syllable to this line, from the preceding line.
5
66 CYMBELINE [ACT II.
Enter IACHIMO.
40. wont ?] Capell, wont. F. 41. had] Singer, have F. 46. stone's]
Rowe, stones F. 47. not] F 2, note F.
59, 60. gains . . . mine] gains my 73, 74. strive . . . value] " This,
sword or loses yours. Vaughan notes doubtless, contains a reflection "of Ovid's
a like cross-placement of words, III . i. 'materiam superabat opus, ' Meta-
66
3, 4 : to ears and tongues Be theme morph. ii. 5 " (Thiselton). Golding's
and hearing." translation of Ovid may be added :
61. circumstances] particulars, details, " But yet the cunning workmanship of
incidental proofs, as often. things therein farre past
68. watching] keeping awake. The stuffe whereof the doores were
71. Cydnus] See Antony and Cleo- made.'
patra, 11. ii. 191-223.
SC. IV .] CYMBELINE 71
102. action did] Rowe, action, did F. 106. Gives . . . ] Johnson. 116.
one ofher] F 2, one her F.
135. the] Rowe, her F. 143. sworn-] Rowe, sworne. F. 148. do't, i']
doo't, i F, do't ; i Capell. 149. something-] Rowe, something. F.
133. colted] New Eng. Dict. quotes 147. limb-meal] limb from limb.
no other example in this precise sense ; So Malory, Le Morte Darthur, viii.
but the meaning " befool " is not un- 37: " he was drawen lymme meale. "
common. Compare "" piecemeal,'" دوinch-meal "
135. Worthy the pressing] F in Tempest, II. ii. 3. For the threat
"(Worthy her pressing)" may be ex- compare Much Ado, IV. i. 193 , and
clamatory , with "breast " treated as Othello, III. iii. 431.
feminine , " Oh but the pressing of her
breast is noble ! "
76 CYMBELINE [ACT II.
Enter POSTHUMUS .
16. a German one] Rowe, a Iarmen on F. 18. for should] Pope, for,
should F. 20. me !] Johnson, me, F.
ACT III
27. may be named] F 2, name F. 30, 31. still One] Johnson, still ; One F.
Act III. Scene 1.
Britain .. . ] Malone.
27. that may be named] F " name "" " All faults that name, nay that hell,
has been emended in other ways ; knows, why hers,
""
Dyce conjectured
66 " have a name In part or all ; rather all, for even
Walker, man can name " ; Daniel, to vice."
66 man "" (nominative to "knows") ; 35. ] Daniel conjectures that this line
Vaughan, "name may name " ; Mr."" has been foisted into the text, and that
W. J. Craig, " tongue may name,' the scene should close with the rhymed
comparing Richard III. I. ii . 81. The couplet.
" name" of F, if right, may be a noun, Act III. Scene 1.
not a verb ; hell knows unnamed and
unnameable vices. Might we read as I. Now . us] Almost identical
follows ? in form with the opening line of King
SC. I.] CYMBELINE 79
out this line he closes the preceding speare has here transferred to Cassibelan
line with " isle." " A Parke must be an adventure which happened to his
inclosed and may not be open "" brother Nennius. 'The same historie
(Minsheu). (says Holinshed) also makes mention
20. rocks] F " Oakes. " Can any Eliza- ofNennius . · who in fight happened
bethan example be found of " oaks " to get Cæsar's sword fastened in his
used metaphorically for ships of shield by a blow which Cæsar stroke at
war? him.'
24. Came] Cæsar's brag was made 31. giglot] A wanton woman, as in
after defeating the King of Pontus. Measurefor Measure, v. i. 352. Com-
Compare As You Like It, v. ii. 34, pare Hamlet, 11. ii."" 240 : she [ For-
and 2 Henry IV. IV. iii. 45 : " I may tune] is a strumpet.'
justly say, with the hook-nosed fellow 32. Lud's town] " By reason that
of Rome, ' I came, saw, and over- King Lud so much esteemed that
came.'" citie [ Troynovant], . the name was
27. ignorant] Johnson : "un- changed, so that it was called Caerlud,
acquainted with the nature of our that is to saie, Luds towne ; and after
boisterous seas " ; perhaps equivalent to by corruption of speech it was named
"silly. " London " (Holinshed, i. 23, i. 59).
30. Cassibelan] Malone : " Shake- 32. rejoicing-fires] hyphened in F.
SC. 1.] CYMBELINE 81
36. moe] more, as in line 64 ; this lanus, III. iii. 69 : " Call me their
form of " mo was so common, says traitor ! Thou injurious tribune ! "
Nares, that it appears as late as 1717 in 49. This ... us] To amend "" the verse
the Oxford Bible of that year ; but Hanmer omits " from us ; Vaughan
F 2 changes the word to " more . would omit "tribute"; S. Walker
37. owe] own, possess, as often in proposes " from 's. "
Shakespeare . 51. sides o' the world] Compare " Let
38. straight arms] Of course opposed nature crush the sides o' the earth
to "crooked," but probably with the together," Winter's Tale, IV. iv. 489.
idea of " stretched " underlying. Com- 51. against all colour] in opposition
pare Julius Cæsar, 11. ii. 66 : " Have to every reason that can be alleged.
[Cæsar] in conquest stretch'd mine New Eng. Dict. quotes Beaumont and
arm so far." " Kings," writes Lyly, Fletcher, Knight of Malta, 1. i. 18 :
Euphues (ed. Arber, p. 77), "have " Did I attempt her with a threadbare
long armes, and rulers large reaches.' name ... She might with colour dis-
45. sir] Cloten addresses the King. allow my suit. "
48. injurious] insulting, as in Corio-
6
82 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
68. to be] Vaughan, to regulate the 74. Pannonians] " The insurrection
verse, would omit these words. of the Pannonians and Dalmatians ...
70. knighted me] This is derived from happened not in the reign of Cymbeline,
Holinshed. but in that of his father, Tenantius
72. he to seek] his seeking. If emen- (Malone).
dation were needed, Vaughan's " Who- 83. fare] probably in the sense of
so seek " might be accepted ; but " be entertained with food, " as in Luke
Vaughan thinks no change is needed. xvi. 19 : "a certain rich man ...
73. keep atutterance ] preserve [whichfared sumptuously. "
i.e. honour] at all extremities à 87. remain] that remains, which
outrance ; so 66 champion me to the words are proposed as an emendation
utterance," Macbeth, III. i. 72. by Daniel ; " make remain " meaning
73. perfect] well informed, as in Iv. " stay" occurs in Coriolanus, I. iv. 62.
ii. 118. In Warner's Albion's England, ch.
84 CYMBELINE [ACT III .
Enter IMOGEN.
34. love : of] love, ofF. 40. Reads] Capell. 42. as you, ] as you : F.
47, 48. your . . . love] that remains 58. speak thick] speak fast. Cotgrave
-increasing in love-your Leonatus. has " Bretonner. To speake thicke
But, as Thiselton says, F ".your en- and short
"" ; or, as we say, nine words at
creasing in love " may be governed by once.'
"to" or by " wishes." 63. inherit] possess, enjoy, as in
50. horse with wings] Is there a re- Tempest, IV. i. 154, and often else-
miniscence here of Ariosto ? where.
52. mean affairs] ordinary business. 64. we may] F 2 has " may
56. bate] deduct, abate (from what I we. "" وو
have said) ; not, I think, the hawk's 66. And our] Pope has " Till our
"bating," fluttering the wings, though and Capell " To our." ووThe force of
this has been suggested. " Tell how," 99line 62, runs on to line 66,
66 to excuse. Malone understands
58. beyond beyond] I am not sure
that F " beyond, beyond " is wrong. " from our " (65) to mean " in conse-
88 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
69. score] misprinted store F ; ride] rid F. 75. clock's] Pope, Clocks F. 80.
nor ... nor] F 2, nor . . . not F.
""
quence of our. " He compares Corio- has a strong foot, and a light head
lanus, II. i. 240, 241 : rids way apace."
"He cannot temperately transport 71. and ... too] Perhaps spoken
his honours aside, with a thought of the designed
From where he should begin and object of her journey.
end. " 72. execution] Imogen's words are
67. Why .. begot?] Why invent touched with dramatic irony. Is it not
an excuse, when what is to create the in fact to execution that she rides ?
need of an excuse does not yet exist ? 75. the clock's behalf] the hour-
" Or ere," before, a duplicated form of glass sands doing the service of a
"ere" ; but in Elizabethan writers clock.
probably often used for " or ever." F 77. presently] immediately, as often.
3 has " or e're." 79. franklin] a freeholder, but rank-
69. ride] So F 2. Mr. Craig thinks ing below the gentry. In Winter's
that F " rid " may be right, meaning Tale, v. ii. 173, we have : " Not swear
dispose of, or clear. The proverbial it, now I am a gentleman? Let boors
expression " willingness rids way " and franklins say it, I'll swear it."
occurs in 3 Henry VI. v. iii. 21. So 80-82. I see . • through] The F
66
Peele,
66 Arraignment of Paris, III. i .: nor heere, not heere " yields a sense
' my game is quick, and rids a length if we understand " neither before me
of ground. " Cotgrave, under Semelle, nor here " ; it may be emended, as
sc. III. ] CYMBELINE 89
gate
Instructs you how to adore the heavens, and bows
you
To a morning's holy office : the gates of monarchs
Are arch'd so high that giants may jet through 5
And keep their impious turbans on, without
Good morrow to the sun. Hail, thou fair heaven !
12. crow] See 1. iii. 15. "How blind is pride ! what eagles
13. sets off] exhibits to advantage. are we still
15. Of • princes] I follow In matters that belong to other
Vaughan's suggestion and delete F men,
comma after " courts." What beetles in our own.
17. allow'd] approved, or acknow- -All Fools, IV. i.
ledged ; as in " ye allow the deeds of 22. attending for a check] dancing
your fathers," Luke xi. 48 ; " as size is attendance to receive a repulse for it.
not size in itself, but as it is seen, so 23. bribe] All the Ff read " Babe, "
service is not service in itself, but as it which Malone, retaining, explains as a
is allowed " (Vaughan). puppet or child's plaything. Steevens
17. to apprehend thus] to view things conjectured that " babe " might refer
in this spirit. to the wardship of infants. Rowe's
20. sharded] having scaly wing- emendation (accepted by Cambridge)
covers. So Antony and Cleopatra, III. "bauble" makes good sense and has
ii. 20 : " They are his shards, and he the advantage of only inserting one
their beetle." Chapman contrasts, in letter- ' bable " being Elizabethan
a moralising spirit, the eagle and the spelling, though in F we have
beetle : bauble." " Bribe" is Hanmer's
SC . III. ] CYMBELINE 91
25. 'em] Capell, him F. 28. know] F 2, knowes |F. 34. prison of]
Vaughan, Prison, or F.
emendation, and I explain it as " taking 33. cell of ignorance] Possibly in op-
bribes of suitors, and doing nothing in position to a cell for study ; Prompt-
their interest " ; "richer " suggests orium Parvulorum has " Celle, or
some kind of wealth, and it must be a stodyynge howse-cella."
base kind of wealth. Johnson conjec- 33. travelling a-bed] The imagined
tured "brabe," Latin brabium, ex- travel of one who lies motionless. I
plained in Cooper's Thesaurus as a think the best comment on this is
66
' prize. " Singer reads " brabe," but Shakespeare's Sonnets, xxvii. :
explains it as a scornful look or word. " Weary with toil I haste me to my
Collier (MS. ) reads " bob, " a ""Shake- bed,
spearian word meaning " taunt. ' Brae The dear repose for limbs with
proposes " badge." travel tired ;
25. gain the cap] have the salute- But then begins a journey in my
taking off the cap - of their tailor. head."
Compare Coriolanus, II . i. 77. Knight But Deighton explains : " travelling
reads " gains " and retains " him fine " the length and breadth of one's bed " ;
from F. and Vaughan, with quotations from
26. book uncross'd] Who yet does North's Plutarch, tries to show , perhaps
not strike out the debt in his book of rightly, that it means travelling in a
debts. So Dekker's Gul's Horn-booke, litter.
chap. iv. " Now if you chance to be a 34. prison of] This is Vaughan's
Gallant not much crost among Citizens, emendation of F " prison or"; the
that is, a Gallant in the Mercers bookes, "r,"he says, is a mutilated " f. " Most
exalted for Sattens and Velvets, if you editors follow Pope's " prison for."
be not so much blest to be crost : But, as Thiselton observes, " or" may
your Powles walke is your onely refuge." be right, the image of a debtor, who
Grosart's Dekker, ii. pp. 232, 233. must keep within the Rule, following
27. proof] experience, as in 1. vi. 70. that of a prison.
E
92 CYMBELIN
[ACT III.
To stride a limit.
Arv. What should we speak of 35
When we are old as you ? when we shall hear
The rain and wind beat dark December, how
35. stride a limit] " overpass his pare North's Plutarch, " Solon " :
bound " (Johnson). " Solon . rebuked their beastli-
37. December, ] Perhaps, as Vaughan nesse and faint cowardly harts " (p.
says, Shakespeare gives " two pictures 105 , ed . 1595).
of winter, not one-its boisterous and
66 44. you speak !] Vaughan proposes
rainy darkness and its biting frosts. " ' you'd speak, " with sense running on
If so, the interrogation of F after to next line.
" December " should be retained, and 50. pain] labour, as often.
perhaps the interrogation in line 36 51. which dies] I think the ante-
deleted. cedent to " which" must be " pain "-
.40. beastly] beast - like, as often ; the labour perishes without attaining
occasionally used by Elizabethan writers fame and honour, and its epitaph is
in the special sense of cowardly, but often slanderous. Others regard " fame
here with the wider meaning. Com- and honour " as the antecedent.
sc. III. ] CYMBELINE 93
Imo. Thou told'st me, when we came from horse, the place
Was near at hand : ne'er long'd my mother so
103. reft'st] Rowe, refts F.
94. nerves] sinews, as often. was their mother, as Vaughan says,
""
96. figure] I think this means part whom the youths honoured.
enacted, as in Tempest, III. iii. 83 : 107. father] Ingleby suggests an
Bravely the figure of this harpy hast apology for the crude explanations in-
thou Performed." See New Eng. Dict. tended for the audience of the theatre
" Figure," 11. Collier (MS. ) has the by saying that this speech serves the
unhappy correction " vigour. " purpose ofa chorus.
97. shows much more] not shows much Scene IV.
more than his brother, but exhibits his
own conception of things much more I. came from horse] dismounted, for
than merely gives life to what I say. the country is here mountainous.
2, 3. my · me] Hanmer read
66 105. her grave] Hanmer emended
thy grave "; but " her " is right ; it " his " and " him. ”
96 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
30
· hath my letter for the purpose : where, if thou
%
fear to strike, and to make me certain it is done,
thou art the pandar to her dishonour, and equally
to me disloyal."
Pis. What shall I need to draw my sword ? the paper
Hath cut her throat already. No, ' tis slander, 35
Whose edge is sharper than the sword , whose tongue
Outvenoms all the worms of Nile, whose breath
Rides on the posting winds, and doth belie-
83. loyal Leonatus] Imogen thinks of Well, I. i. 20 : " how sad a passage
her husband's parting words, I. i. 95 : 'tis ! "
"I will remain The loyal'st husband 95. strain] motion of the mind, im-
that did e'er plight troth," and of his pulse, as in Coriolanus, V. iii. 149 :
letter, III. ii. 47 : "that remains loyal " the fine strains of honour."
to his vow." Rowe added the stage- 96. disedged] New Eng. Dict. quotes
direction, " Pulling his Letter out of her from Ward's Simple Cobbler (1647) :
66 disedged
Bosom." appetites." Compare Ham-
86. stomachers] The position of the let, 111. ii. 259 : " It would cost you a
stomacher appears in Howells' Venetian groaning to take off my edge. "
Life, ch. xix.: "Over her breast she 97. tirest] feed ravenously, rending
wore a stomacher of cloth of gold ." the prey to pieces (used properly of
87. false teachers] the idea is evi- birds of prey). So Venus and Adonis,
dently teachers ofheresy. lines 55, 56 :
89-92. ] The division of lines is " Even as an empty eagle, sharp by
Capell's ; F three lines ending fast,
" Posthumus," 66"King," """suites," F Tires with her beak on feathers,
reading " Posthumus that.' flesh and bone. "
93. fellows] equals in rank. 98. pang'd] Hall, Chronicles, Henry
94. passage] occurrence, as in All's VIII. aaa 3 ; "by the tormenting of
102 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
which [sickness] men were .. so pain- balls first," and Collier (MS. ) " Crack
fully pangued." In Henry VIII. II. iii. mine eye-balls first. "
15, we have "'tis a sufferance panging 106. pretence] Vaughan understands
As soul and body's severing." this not as a " pretext," but as 66 design
104. eye-balls out] F & eye balles of killing her which he does not carry
first." Hanmer's "blind first " is out. " The word is used in both senses
accepted by many editors. But John- in various passages of Shakespeare ;
son's conjecture is supported by but the sense of pretext seems to me to
Steevens' citation from a MS. comedy, suit this passage well.
The Bugbears : " I doubte Least for III. unbent . stand] like a bow
lacke of my slepe I shall watch my unbent ; " stand " has the technical
eyes oute," and by that from Middle- sense explained in note on II. iii. 74.
ton The Roaring Girl, IV. ii.: “ I'll 112. elected deer] Malone quotes from
watch out mine eyes. " Ingleby Passionate Pilgrim, xix. :
adds from P. Woodhouse, Democritus "When as thine eye hath chose the
his Dreame (1605 ) , ed . Grosart, p. 2 : dame,
" Thou 'lt ... weep thine eye-balles And stall'd the deer that thou
out," Rowe read " break mine eye- shouldst strike. "
sc. Iv. ] CYMBELINE 103
113. lose] Prof. Littledale suggests jury. " It seems not improbably right,
" loose," release myself from. as repeated words are apt to be errone-
118. tent] probe, as in Hamlet, ""II. ii. ously deleted.
626 : " I'll tent him to the quick.' 124. singular] unique, pre-eminent,
124. Ay] Vaughan proposes to re- as in Winter's Tale, IV. iv. 144. Cot-
peat the words 66 some villain " - grave explains singulier, " singular,
some villain, ay," ending this line excellent, peerlesse, passing
with " art" and the next with " in- others. "
104 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
swan's nest from the shores of the pool. 149. self- danger] danger to it-
The " world " means the terrene, in- self.
habited world, and Britain was not in 150. Pretty and full of view] Per-""
it, as Battista Guarino writes : " Brit- haps " pretty " means "" becoming, '
annia ipsa, ""quæ extra orbem terrarum but I think it qualifies 66“ full of view,"
posita est' quoted in Einstein's as it seems to qualify dark " in the
Italian Renaissance in England, p. following from Beaumont and Fletcher,
19 n. So in Trevisa's translation of Beggars Bush,v. i.: " Mistress, it grows
Bartholomew Glanvil (Of Anglia) : somewhat pretty and dark.' Collier
66 ( MS. ) has " Privy. " " Full of view,"
' England is the most island of Ocean,
and is beclipped all about by the sea, having many opportunities of observing
and departed from the roundness of the things and persons ; or perhaps, as some
world,' i.e. of it, yet not in it. See explain it, " full of promise. " Thisel-
also Holinshed, i. 2, 1, 30, quoted p. 10 ton makes " full of view " equivalent
of Stone's Shakespeare's Holinshed. to "for all to see."
147. Dark] ' Darkness,' applied to 154. means] So F ; means ! "
the mind, is secresy ' ; applied to the Capell. In 156 F has " adven-
fortune, is obscurity " (Johnson). For ture. "
"mind " Theobald read " mien." 155. Though] Heath conjectured
148. That which] refers to Imogen's and Rann read " Through. "
sex and perhaps her rank.
106 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
A man already.
Pis. First, make yourself but like one. 170
Fore-thinking this, I have already fit-
'Tis in my cloak-bag- doublet, hat, hose, all
That answer to them : would you, in their serving
And with what imitation you can borrow
From youth of such a season, 'fore noble Lucius 175
Present yourself, desire his service, tell him
Wherein you're happy,-which will make him know
If that his head have ear in music,-doubtless
With joy he will embrace you , for he's honourable,
And, doubling that, most holy. Your means
abroad, 180
You have me, rich ; and I will never fail
Beginning nor supplyment.
Imo. Thou art all the comfort
The gods will diet me with. Prithee, away :
There's more to be consider'd ; but we'll even
180. abroad, ] Theobald, abroad : F. 181. me, ] Capell, me F.
170, 171. one. • . this] The punc- make " ; Vaughan, taking " make " as
tuation is Rowe's ; F has " one, an imperative , proposes "well make ."
this." 180, 181. Your means • • rich] As
173. in theirserving] withtheir help."" to your means abroad, you have ha me
Daniel conjectures " in their seeming.' and I am rich. " For means " s
175. season] time of life. been conjectured .
177. Wherein you're happy] in what 182. supplyment] continuance of
you are accomplished, as in Two Gentle- supply.
men of Verona, IV. i. 34 : " Have you 183. diet] may mean no more than
the tongues? Val. Myووyouthful travel feed, but " diet " was often used of
therein made me happy.' food prescribed as a regimen of health.
177. will make ] With Ingleby, I retain 184. even] New Eng. Dict. explains
the reading of F, omitting, however, this as keep pace with, act up to ; but
the comma after " know," and with it does not cite other examples of this
Ingleby I explain " which will make sense. In All's Well, 1. iii. 3, " the
him know whether he has an ear for care I have had to even your content "
music." Several editorsadopt Hanmer's seems akin in meaning. So Two Noble
emendation, "you'll make." Theo- Kinsmen, I. iv.: " [they shall] even
bald read " will make him so " [i.e. each thing Our haste does leave imper-
66
happy]. Malone conjectured we'll fect. " Keightley conjectures " even do."
108 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
186. soldier to] courageously pre- 191. I ... queen] Mr. Craig con-
pared for. F " soldier too.""" Compare jectures that these words, which would
Pericles, 99IV. i. 8 : " be A soldier to thy excite Imogen's distrust, are spoken
purpose. aside.
188. short farewell] not, I think, Scene V.
farewell for a short time, but a hasty
farewell. The same expression occurs 2. wrote, ] So F. Pope placed a semi-
in Dekker, A Mayden-head well lost colon after " wrote," thus providing
(Pearson's reprint, vol. iv. p. 135). an expressed " I " as subject of " am
190. carriage] conveyance. sorry.
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 109
Re-enter Attendant.
44. loud'st] Capell, lowd F. 51. to blame] F 4, too blame F. 56. Exit
Cloten] Capell, Exit after days F.
44. loud'st of noise] So Capell ; after ' be. ' In the sixteenth and seven-
"loudest noise,"Rowe; " loud'st noise, " teenth centuries the ' to ' was mis-
Singer. But, as Vaughan argues, the understood as ' too,' and ' blame '
Folio " loud ofnoise " may be right ; he taken as adjective = blameworthy, culp-
cites from Holland's Plinie, x. 29 : able. " It seems idle to preserve in
"For at one time you shall hear her the text the error.
[the nightingale's] voice full of loud, 53, 54. Prove ... king] To supply
another time as low, " where loud is a a syllable Steevens conjectures " Go,
substantive meaning loudness. son" ; S. Walker, " Son-son. " Per-
49. bound] Does this mean bound in "" haps Vaughan is right in taking
duty?oris the sense "ready," " willing,' "Prove" as a light dissyllable. He
as often ? compares the line 3 Henry VI. I. i.
51. to blame] The explanation of Ff 131 : " Prove it, Henry, and thou shalt
1-3 "too blame " is thus given in be king. "
New Eng. Dict. , which cites several 56. Go, look after] Vaughan ingeni-
examples : " The dative infinitive ' to ously argues that Cloten, as F directs,
blame ' is much used as the predicate has left at the word " days " ; that the
112 CYMBELINE [ACT III.
Re-enter CLOTEN.
69. [Aside] Globe ed. (S. Walker conj. ). 73. Than .. woman ;] Then
Lady, Ladies, Woman, F.
Queen is addressing here an attendant, agitation may end her husband's life.
and that we should read : Wyatt, however, gives the words a
" Go, look after figurative meaning: " May this night
Pisanio, thou, that stands, etc. " of sorrow caused by Imogen's dis-
Hanmer had the same idea, but read appearance deprive him of the coming
" he that standeth " in line 57. day of her succession to the throne "-
57. stand'st sofor] so firmly supports, an interpretation which seems to me
So Merry Wives, III. ii. 62 : " I stand somewhat strained.
wholly for you. " 73. Than lady, ladies, woman ;]
70. This night forestall] Malone "than any lady, than all ladies, than
quotes from Comus : " Perhaps fore- all womankind" (Johnson). Compare
stalling night prevented them.' The All's Well, 11. iii. 202 : " [companion]
Queen hopes that the King's violent to any count, to all counts, to what is
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 113
He is in Rome.
Clo. Where is she, sir ? Come nearer ;
92. Come nearer] Mr. Craig asks Cloten, and so Ingleby ; Malone, giving
Can this mean "Come closer to the them to Pisanio, explains : " I must
point at issue "? either practise this deceit upon Cloten
93. home] thoroughly, as in Tempest, or perish by his fury. " But perhaps
v. i. 71. these four words are not spoken aside,
100. Thispaper] the " feigned letter" and are meant to deceive Cloten by
of v. v. 279. apparent reluctance in showing a letter
102. Or this, or perish] Johnson which Pisanio believes can really do
thought that these words belong to no harm to Imogen.
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 115
III. undergo] undertake, as often. thing that Cloten had forgotten to ask
114. do, ] so Theobald ; no comma in appears to have been How long is 't
F. since she went to Milford-Haven ?'
120. bare] poor, as often. line 155 " (Thiselton).
133. I forgot to ask] " The one
116 . CYMBELINE [ACT III.
Re-enter IMOGEN .
Imogen, Vaughan supposes that " I'll Vaughan conjectures " peize, " meaning
man "" is spoken aside, and would weight (of ballasting), and perhaps
change " I'll love to I love." Ad- rightly. Imogen means that if she had
dressing Imogen (as Vaughan reads) been a rustic girl, her price or value
" I love him " means "I love Guid- would have been less (or she would
erius," and such a welcome as I'd give have been less of a prize), and it being
my brother is yours. a more even weight to that of Posthu-
74, 75, 'Mongst . . . brothers] I think mus, the ship of their fortunes would
the above reading represents the inten- have run more smoothly.
tion of F, which places a note of inter- 78. wrings] writhes, suffers acutely,
rogation, sometimes carelessly used in as in Much Ado, v. I. 28 : " those that
F for a note of exclamation, after wring under the load of sorrow." " His
" friends." heart with sorrow wrings "-Breton,
76. prize] Hanmer read " price. " Pasquil's Madcapp (ed. Grosart, I. i. ).
SC . VII.] CYMBELINE 123
ACT IV
of20.
F her face]
"i thy faceHanmer's
" seems emendation
required ; the slashes of the encounter-the gar-
ments worn by Posthumus.
Imogen's insult -" his meanest gar- 21. haply] Johnson ; (" happily ") F.
ment"-was to be doubly revenged, by The spelling " happily " is common.
Cloten's wearing one suit of Posthumus 23. power of] control over, as in
in doing violence to her, and by cutting Hamlet, 11. ii. 27.
to pieces in her presence-perhaps by
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 127
24. noble strain !] Schmidt explains and late for the hunt ; the words mean
" strain " as impulse, feeling ; but " Now, sir, I am ready."
" noble strain " surely means generous 35. imperious] F "emperious, " im-
temper inherited from a high-bred race. perial. Compare " the rude imperious
Compare Julius Cæsar, v. i. 59 : " the surge,"2 Henry IV. III . i. 20 (where per-
noblest of thy strain." haps the meaning is " dictatorial "), and
26, 27. Cowards grace] In F "Imperious Cæsar, " Hamlet, Q, v. i.
these lines are marked with quotation- 236 ( Imperial " F). " Imperious " and
marks before each line, as often is " tributary " are contrasted epithets.
the case in our old dramas where 35. monsters ;] Vaughan proposes
maxims or sententious utterances 66 monsters for the dish " ; creatures
occur. that would be monsters in a dish. In
29. miracle] This may be a noun- the next line " as sweet " means, I
doeth, accomplishes a very miracle- think, as sweet as the sea-fish are
or a verb, shows itself miraculous. monstrous. Thiselton notes that dishes
Compare " That monsters it," Lear, I. had specially to be made for monstrous
i. 223. fishes at a feast in Essex house de-
31. So please] addressed to Belarius, scribed in Weldon's Court of King
who has said it is the " ninth hour," James.
SC. II.] CYMBELINE 129
38. drug] Here Dyce and other appears," it appears. Knight reads
editors place a stage-direction : " Swal- " distress'd he appears, hath ; " dis-
lows some." tressed appears he, hath'"" has been
38. stir] move him (to tell his suggested .
history). 49. But ... characters] F makes two
39. gentle] of gentle birth. lines, ending " Cookerie ?" and " Char-
40. honest] upright. racters," and assigns " He cut
46. bound] Capell, for the metre's Dieter"to Arvi. , placing Arvi. alsobefore
sake, reads " still bound. " " Nobly" (line 51 ), evidently in the first
46. shalt] Warburton " shall," which instance an error. Some editors end line
Heath approved, and he would con- 49 with "roots," and make " In char-
tinue the speech to Imogen. By acters "" a separate line. I believe the
"bound " Imogen meant " indebted " ; scansion to be " But his neat cook
Belarius means " bound by kindness. " ry' he cut our roots in ch'racters."
47. appears] Mr. Craig proposes "'t Characters means letters or emblems.
9
130 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
50. sauced] sawe'st F, sawc't F 2. 57. him] Pope, them F. 58. Grow,
patience !] Theobald, Grow patient, F.
Enter CLOTEN.
76. who] See III.iii. 87; " whom " F 2. 89. Cloten . . . villain] Does Guid-
81. clothes] Is the idea in Cloten's erius jestingly take "Cloten, thou
mind : " Do you not know me, by villain as the name, and improve on
reason, or in consequence of my wear- it by his " Cloten, thou double villain "?
ing these clothes ? "-the clothes being, Or is " thou double villain " only a
in fact, those of Posthumus ? Every retort for " thou villain "?
Briton should know the great Cloten, 90. Toad .. Spider] Pope omits
but the unprincely garments may con- " or"; Capell omits "or Adder ,
ceal his majesty. Vaughan proposes Spider. " Hanmer ends the line with
" Know'st not my clothes. ' "Toad," and proceeds " Adder or
86. injurious] insulting, insolent, as spider it would. " Could Shakespeare
in III. i. 48. have written " atter-spider," poisonous
SC . II.] CYMBELINE 133
spider, remembering the word " atter- 101. company's] F "Companie's. "
cop," spider. In Richard III. 1. ii. Globe and Cambridge editions read
66 companies abroad ?" - perhaps
19, we have the same group " adders,
spiders, toads " (Q), where F reads rightly.
to wolves, to spiders, toads." 103-107. I cannot Cloten] To
92. mere confusion ] absolute discom- mark the transition from doubt to assur-
fiture. ance in this speech, Vaughan would
96. Die the death] New Eng. Dict. punctuate with a comma and dash after
(" Die," 2 c. ) quotes Dr. Johnson : " tell " and a full stop after "saw
" ' die the death ' seems to be a solemn him " ; colons after "he wore "" and
phrase for death inflicted by law." " as his."
Examples, not all of which confirm 104. lines of Javour] lineaments of
Johnson, are cited in New Eng. Dict. his countenance or appearance. So
97. proper] own. All's Well, 1. i. 107 : 77 every line and
99. Lud's town] See III. i. 32. trick of his sweet favour."
134 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
105. snatches] catches, seizures, me, what act, That roars so loud, and
meaning, I think, a violent check in thunders in the index ? "
speech, which is followed by a " burst III, 112. for defect ... fear] The
of speaking." I know of no other ex- text may be corrupt, but I leave it as
ample ; but the Scottish and Irish word in F. We may interpret : " You have
" ganch," vb. and sb. , means as vb. to just grounds to be anxious about Guid-
stammer, and as sb. , a snatch at any- erius, for a half-rational creature, like
thing, which illustrates the double Cloten, is often to be dreaded. " Com-
meaning. See Wright, Dialect Dic- pare Coriolanus, IV. vii. 39-47, where
tionary. it is suggested that " defect of judg-
made him
106. absolute] positive without quali- ment " in Coriolanus "
fying doubt. New Eng. Dict. quotes fear'd." But the run of the passage
Rowland's Looke to It, 14 : " Thou makes it probable that these words
wilt vow most absolute to know That assign a reason for the absence of fear
which thy conscience knowes thou never in Cloten. Mr. Thiselton understands :
knew." Cloten, in his immature years (" scarce
109, 110. Being ... man] This has made up to man ") had no fears, though
been taken by some to mean " While the defective judgment of early youth
Cloten was still in immature youth" ; is often a cause of fear. Crosby, ap-
but I think the meaning is Being proved by Ingleby, explains : Cloten,
congenitally half a fool, " or, as we say, not having a man's wits, had no fears ;
" not all there, " not having his full for it is a defective exercise ofjudgment
wits. So, with reference to physical which causes fear, whereas Cloten is
imperfection, Richard III. (1. i. 20, 21 ) wholly devoid of judgment. Many
describes himself as emendations have been made or pro-
" Deform'd , unfinished, sent before posed ; Theobald, " the effect of
my time cause " ; Hanmer, " defect of
Into this breathing world, scarce cure 29 ; Hudson (suggested by Crosby,
half made up." but by him withdrawn), " The act ..
III. roaring ""loud-tongued ; need- cause." I still think that a proposal
lessly altered to ' daring " by Hanmer. which I was the first to make, which is
Compare Hamlet, III . iv. 51 , 52 : “ Ay the reading in the Parchment Shake-
SC. II .] CYMBELINE 135
132. humour] Mr. Thiselton ex- 141. fetch us in] capture us, as in
plains F " Honor " as the title of a Antony and Cleopatra, IV. i. 14.
nobleman ; did I believe it correct, I 143-145. ] Vaughan would end line
should explain it : " He gloried only 143 with " ground " and line 144 with
in mutation." The mistake " honor" " hath," reading " We fear, if we do
for " humour " occurs in Merry Wives, fear, this. "
1. iii. 91 (F), where Q gives correctly 145. ordinance] what is ordained.
66' humour." 146. foresay] Jonson in The Silent
66 134, 135. ] In F line 134 ends with Woman, IV. i. , has “ a very foresaid
frenzy," line 135 begins with " Not " ; bear-whelp," meaning apparently stub-
the emendation is Capell's. born, wilful ; " foresay" here may
138. hunt] F 3 changes this to mean " determine, " "will," rather
" haunt." than " predict."
139. head] may gather strength. See
III. v. 25.
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 137
163. I prithee] Pope omits " I." 170. Thou ... how] Vaughan would
Ingleby conjectures " Hie, prithee." restore F text with a new punctuation :
167. to gain his colour] to restore the " Thou, divine Nature thou , thyself ”-
bloom of health to his cheeks. Daniel perhaps
ແ now."" a better reading than Pope's
for "his " proposes " him."
168. I'ld ... blood] I'd let blood 172. zephyrs] Cambridge ed. re-
(bleed, as a surgeon, the metaphor cords " zephyr " as a conjecture of
equivalent here to ' slaughter ") for a Blair, who perhaps took " his sweet
whole parish of Clotens. Compare head " not as the violet's but as
Richard III. III. i. 183 : zephyr's.
" His ancient knot of dangerous 174. enchafed excited, aroused
adversaries (primarily "heated "). So Othello,
To-morrow are let blood at Pom- II. i. 17 : " the enchafed flood."
fret-castle." 176. wonder] Pope reads " wonder-
Farmer quotes from Fenner the ex- ful, " probably as a metrical improve-
pression " half a parish of children," ment.
and Reed from Davenant, The Wits, 177. instinct] The accent is on the
fol. 1673, p. 222 : " a whole parish of second syllable, as in Coriolanus, v.
children." For " parish "" Hanmer iii. 35, and elsewhere.
read " marish."
SC. II . ] CYMBELINE 139
Re-enter GUIDERIUS.
184. clotpoll thick or " wooden " a solemn requiem should be played,
head ; suggested here, probably, by as it seems to him, for the dead
the name Cloten. Cloten?
""
186. ingenious] Rowe, " ingenuous 194. apes] often used as equivalent to
F, this form being frequently misused fools ; often used specially of sportive
for "ingenious " in seventeenth century. youngsters. So in The Pilgrimage to
See New Eng. Dict. , " Ingenuous," 6. Parnassus (ed. Macray, p. 21 ) a school-
192. accidents] events, as often. master is described as " interpretinge
193. lamenting toys] lamentation for pueriles confabulationes to a companie
trifles. Is Guiderius indignant that of seaven-yeare-olde apes. "
140 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
221. pale primrose] In F, " face. and some thinke that if the body should
Pale-Primrose,". Ellacombe, Plant-lore remaine unburied that he would cover
of Shakespeare, illustrates the plaintive the whole body also. " Compare the
or sad associations with the primrose in dirge for Marcello in Webster's White
the poetry of Spenser, Shakespeare, and Devil,
"" and Drayton in The Owl :
Milton. Compare " pale primroses, Cov'ring with moss the dead's un-
That die unmarried," Winter's Tale, closed eye,
IV. iv. 122. The little redbreast teaches charity. "
222. azured veins] Primrose The story of " The Babes in the
and " azured harebell " appear in im- Wood " will be remembered.
te
media succe ssion in Drayton's Poly- 225. charitable bill Mr. Thiselton
olbion, xv. In William Smith's Chloris, quotes from G. Minshull, Essayes ana
1596, Sonnet 47, we have " azurde Characters, 1618 (Tait's reprint, p. 46) :
vaines. " Ellacombe identifies Shake- "Robin-red-breasts that bring strawes
speare's harebell with the wild hyacinth. in their charitable bils to cover the dead. ”
223. leafof] Collier (MS. ) has " leafy." 228. when] F has " besides. When, "
The eglantine of Shakespeare is the ending the speech with a dash, as if it
Sweet Brier (see Ellacombe ). Milton were interrupted, which may be right.
distinguishes the " sweet brier " from 229. winter-ground] Steevens asserts
"the twisted eglantine . " that to " winter-ground " a plant is to
223. whom] Eccles "" conjectured protect it from the inclemency of the
" who." Does " whom here stand winter season by straw, dung, etc. , laid
for "who," or is "breath" the nomina- over it ; he cites no example. War-
"3
tive to " out-sweetened " ? Compare burton conjectured " winter-gown,"
King John, IV. ii. 165 : " Arthur , which
66 Theobald read ; Collier (MS . ),
whom they say is kill'd." winter-guard"; Ingleby conjectures
224. ruddock] the robin redbreast. " twine around," or " wind around "
In F " Raddocke." Spenser, Epitha- Verplanck, " winter · green ," which
lamion, has " The ruddock_warbles word occurs in Cotgrave, as I am in-
soft. " Reed quotes T. Johnson, formed. William Turner, Names
Cornucopia, 1596 : " The robin red- Herbes, 1548, suggests that "limonium"
breast, if he find a man or woman may be called in English " Wynter-
dead, will cover all his face with mosse, greene."
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 143
Of place ' tween high and low. Our foe was princely ;
And though you took his life as being our foe, 250
Yet bury him as a prince.
Gui. Pray you, fetch him hither,
Thersites' body is as good as Ajax',
When neither are alive.
Arv. If you'll go fetch him,
We'll say our song the whilst.—Brother, begin.
[Exit Belarius.
Gui. Nay, Cadwal , we must lay his head to the east ; 255
My father hath a reason for 't.
Arv. 'Tis true.
Gui. Come on then and remove him .
Arv. So,-Begin.
SONG.
Gui. Fear no more the heat o' the sun,
Nor the furious winter's rages ;
Thou thy worldly task hast done, 260
Home art gone and ta'en thy wages :
Golden lads and girls all must,
As chimney-sweepers, come to dust.
249. 'tween] F, twixt F 2. 251. you] F, thee F 2. 254. Exit Belarius ]
Capell. 257. So, -] Capell, So, F.
below, and does he mean that in the and Phoenicians placed their heads to
present world reverence acts as a divid- the east ; the Athenians, some think,
ing angel ? Ulysses in Troilus and towards the west, which Christians still
Cressida, ina remarkable passage ( 1. iii. retain. " Grant White, Studies in
83 sqq. )justifies distinctions of rank, and Shakespeare, p. 300, writes : " Anti-
dwells on their importance in society. quarians now determine the nationality
252. Thersites Ajax'] The of ancient sepulchral remains in Eng-
marks of case are Hanmer's. Theobald land by the direction of the graves in
read " Thersites' . . . Ajax. " which they are found. If the graves
254. the whilst] as in KingJohn, IV. are oriented, the remains are those of
ii. 194. ancient [Christian] Britons ; if not, of
255. east] Sir Thomas Browne in Anglo- Saxons or Danes."
Hydriotaphia, iii. , writes : " The Per- 262, 263. Golden • .] Staunton
sians by north and south ; the Megarians thinks the concluding couplet of each
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 145
272. not] F, no F 2.
stanza so inferior to the rest that these terms with another " (Johnson) ; " seal
lines may be attributed to the writer of the same contract with " (Steevens).
the Vision in Act v. No other example of this meaning is
269. this] Hanmer reads " thee." cited in New Eng. Dict.; but " con-
271. thunder · stone] thunder - bolt, sign " in the sense "to set one's seal,
often regarded as a stone. So Othello, subscribe, agree to anything " occurs
v. ii. 24 : " Are there no stones in in 2 Henry IV. v. ii. 143 , and Henry
heaven But what serve for the thunder?" V. v. ii. 326. Compare Romeo ana
Lyly, Euphues, ed. Arber, p. 45 : " The Juliet, v. iii. 114 : " [lips] seal with a
thunder [hath] a great clap, yet but a righteous kiss A dateless bargain to
lyttle stone." In Conrad Gesner's De engrossing death ! " In this line for
Rerum Fossilium . . figuris, Zurich, " thee " Johnson conjectures " this. "
1565, pp. 62-64, thunderstones are 276. exorciser] Here one who calls
66 up " spirits by magical rites ; SO
depicted, which are obviously prehis-
toric stone-axes, and stone-hammers. " exorcist " in Julius Cæsar, II. i. 323 :
272. slander, censure] Johnson con- Thou, like an exorcist, has conjured
jectures " slander's censure. up My mortified spirit " ; and Dekker,
274. lovers must] Elze conjectures Satiromastix, 183 : " This ghost of
"loved must. ' Tucca . was raised up (in print) by
275. Consign] " submit to the same new Exorcismes. "
ΙΟ
146 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
293. 'Ods pittikins] " This diminu- 66 : " Memory, the warder of the brain
tive adjuration is used by Dekker and Shall be a fume," and Tempest, v. 67.
Webster in Westward Hoe [v. iv. ], 306. still: even] Staunton proposes
1607 ; in The Shoemaker's Holiday, "still, even when I wake ! "
1600 [ Dekker, ed. Pearson, vol. i. p. 307. Without . felt] To regulate
26]. It is derived from ' God's my the verse, it has been proposed to omit
pity,' which likewise occurs in Cym- the second " me " ; Dyce conjectures
beline" (Steevens). " imag'd " for " imagined. "
294. gone] walked, as in King Lear, 311. brawns] muscles ; especially of
1. iv. 134 : " Ride more than thou the arm ; so Troilus and Cressida, 1.
goest. " iii. 297 : " And in my vantbrace put
298. so] in like manner. Needlessly this wither'd brawn. "
altered to " sure," Pope ; " lo," Collier 311. Jovial] like that of Jove.
(MS. ). Steevens quotes several examples of
301. fumes] Compare Macbeth, 1. vii. the word used in this sense by Hey.
148 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
wood. Thus in The Silver Age ( Pear- head " ; Hanmer, " thy head " ; Knight,
son's Dekker, vol. iii. p. 142) : Alcides' " the head" ; Vaughan would omit
" high Ioviall hand. In Drayton's " head. "
The Owl, line 220, the eagle is " this 323. be, Pisanio] F. Capell reads
princely jovial fowl. ” "be? Pisanio ? " ; Hanmer, " be ?
315. irregulous] lawless, disorderly ; Pisanio ! " Vaughan proposes " be?
no other example is known, but the Pisanio," connecting Pisanio" with
verb “ irregulate," to disorder, occurs the next line.
in seventeenth century writers. "" John- 325. pregnant] evident, as in Winter's
son conjectured " th' irreligious.' Tale, v. ii. 34, and elsewhere.
320. Posthumus !] accented else- 329. Cloten's] Vaughan regards F
where on the second syllable. Capell " Cloten " as in conformity with Shake-
conjectured " Posthumus O ! " speare's practice where one genitive
323. this head] In Ff 3, 4 "his case follows another.
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 149
366. it ... it] Steevens, 't • • 't F. 371. There is] F, There are F 2.
377. Aside] Rowe.
But is not the meaning : Noble Nature 379. Say you, sir ?] What do you
only took away the life-Who mutilated say? Compare Heywood, The Faire
the body? Maid ofthe West (Pearson's ed. vol. ii.
373. Try never] The verse has p. 266) : " Spenc. Sa'y sir ? 2 Draw.
been emended : "" many, and all " Nothing but anon anon sir." F prints
(Johnson) ; " serve them " (Pope). Per- this line as three lines ; Hanmer omits
haps, however, Wyatt is right when he " sir. "
says "The commas punctuate Imogen's 380. approve] prove, as in v. v.
sobs." 245.
152 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
389. poor pickaxes] meaning her separate line by Pope ; in F the words
hands or fingers. So Merry Devil of close the preceding line. S. Walker
Edmonton : " I'll dig her grave with proposes : " And rather father than
my nails." masterthee. My friends, "-as one line.
390. wild wood-leaves] So F. The 399. partisans] A partisan was a
Cambridge editors and Vaughan in- kind of halbert.
dependently conjecture " wild-wood 400. arm ] take in your arms. In
leaves." Two Noble Kinsmen, V. iii. 112, " Arm
394. entertain] take into service, your prize " means give your arm to
employ, as in Much Ado, I. iii. 60 : her.
""
Being entertained for a perfumer." 400. preferr'd] commended or ad-
396. My friends] So printed as a vanced to favour.
sc. III. ] CYMBELINE 153
SCENE III .
—A Room in Cymbeline's Palace.
2. find we] The conjecture " do we occupancy." Eccles conjectured "6 our
find" is perhaps as likely to be right as use.
the F 2 reading given in the text above. II. render] yielding of information.
4. This way] So acting. Compare the use of the verb v. v. 135.
6. revolts] Pope read " revolters," 13. whose answer] the retaliation for
which is the meaning ; but the word which. Compare v. iii. 79.
" revolt" occurs in King John, v. ii. 17. the Roman horses] F " their "
151 , and elsewhere. Chapman Widow's (for " the ") is possibly not incorrect,
Tears, II. i. , has " revolts from man- meaning " those Roman horses they
hood." have to do with."
7. During their use] while put to 18. quarter'd fires] the watch-fires
use bythem. Hudson thinks the words in their quarters. Rann's reading
may mean " during their present armed " quarter'd files " may possibly be right.
SC. IV. ] CYMBELINE 157
19. cloy'd importantly] " cloy" was thetical, and that " But to be still "
often used for "to obstruct " or 66 en- means "to be ever only."
cumber "; " importantly" may mean 29. tanlings] I retain the F capitals
" momentously, " by momentous matter ; in " Summer" and 66 Winter," for
or, as "important " means urgent, im- perhaps personification may explain the
portunate (Comedy ofErrors, v. i. 138, diminutive " tanlings " - - Summer, a
Much Ado, دوII. i. 74), it may ""mean mother with her infants tanned by the
66 urgently. Eccles' reading em- sun, Winter, a king, whose slaves wince
ploy'd " for " cloy'd," derived from under his lash.
Warburton's " 'ploy'd," is unneces- 33. o'ergrown] Belarius (see v. iii.
sary. 17) wears a long white beard : " thereto
20. upon our note] in notice of us. so o'ergrown " may mean " besides, so
See IV. iii. 44. bearded.' The meanings " grown out
27. certainty] Explained by Malone of memory" and " grown old " have
as referring to 'want of breeding," been suggested. Compare Chapman,
which is the certain consequence of Homer's Odysseys, xvi. 361 , where
this hard (F " heard ") life. I take it Ulysses speaks of his person as " wholly
to mean the assured continuance-the overgrown With all appearance of a
positive 66certainty" opposed to the poor old swain " ; and Harrington's
privative want." Vaughan suggests Orlando Furioso, xliii. 89 : " overgrown
that "aye . · · promised " is paren- with hair." See a long note in Dyce.
158 CYMBELINE [ACT IV.
Cannot be question'd.
Arv. By this sun that shines,
I'll thither : what thing is it that I never 35
Did see man die ! scarce ever look'd on blood,
But that of coward hares, hot goats, and venison !
Never bestrid a horse, save one that had
A rider like myself, who ne'er wore rowel
Nor iron on his heel! I am ashamed 40
To look upon the holy sun, to have
The benefit of his blest beams, remaining
So long a poor unknown.
Gui. By heavens, I'll go :
If you will bless me, sir, and give me leave,
I'll take the better care, but if you will not, 45
The hazard therefore due fall on me by
The hands of Romans !
Arv. So say I : amen.
Bel. No reason I , since of your lives you set
So slight a valuation, should reserve
My crack'd one to more care. Have with you , boys ! 50
If in your country wars you chance to die,
34. question'd] no question can be thinks that the two kinds of medieval
raised as to your identity. spur are indicated, a long iron spur let
35. what thing is it] Does this mean, into the armour of the heel, and the
as often explained, " What a discredit- spur fastened by thongs, and tipped
able thing it is," or simply " What with a wheel of smaller points.
matter is it "? 42. blest] Theobald (ed. 2) very need-
37. hot] Topsell, History of Four- lessly read " best."
footed Beasts, p. 190, writes of goats ; 46. hazard therefore due] the risk
"for (Archelaus saith) they are ever due to my disobedience to you.
Febricitantes, because their breath 48. of] Capell reads " on," but
is hotter, and their copulation more needlessly.
fiery. " 51. country wars] wars of your
39, 40. rowel Nor iron] Vaughan country.
SC. IV. ] CYMBELINE 159
ACT V
SCENE I.
-Britain. The Roman Camp.
II. wretch, ] The Globe ed. has no with the thought of its further progress,
comma, but the parenthesis of F a dread which will cause him to bring to
(" wretch ") suggests that the word is an end the growing sum of evil- by the
an exclamation. honourable death which he anticipates
14. elder] meaning "later " ; the and that to his infinite advantage.
idea of a course of evils developing to " Thrift " in the sense of gain, profit, is
maturity being transferred to the evils common in Shakespeare. Emendations
themselves, which proceed from a more are many : "dreaded," Theobald ;
developed stage of sin. Compare " dreaded shrift," Singer (War-
"elder days," meaning days of more burton conj. ) ; " dream it, " Vaughan
advanced age in King Richard II. II. conj. , and others.
iii. 43: " my service ... raw and young, 16. But • own] Imogen is
Which elder days shall ripen. " Of safe with you ; as for me, execute your
emendations proposed or accepted good pleasure upon me, in punishment
Collier's " later " and Vaughan's " ill it may be, and make me blest in my
a worse "" may be mentioned. Mr. submission. Johnson conjectured " blest
Thiselton takes " worse " for a verb wills." For " Imogen Lloyd pro-
governing " each elder." poses " judgment " or " vengeance.
15. And thrift] The F text 20. mistress ; peace !] Staunton pro-
seems to me correct . In generalising posed " mistress-piece " (a kind of femi-
about evil-doers Posthumus is thinking nine of " master-piece "), an expression
of his own case. He has thought of which occurs in Lord Herbert's Life
his past -the wager, which was a trap and Reign of King Henry VIII. :
for Imogen, and the murder ; he now " Mistress Elizabeth Blunt was thought
comes to his present state one in ... to be the beauty and mistress-
which this course of evil terrifies him piece of her time."
SC. II. ] CYMBELINE 161
4. carl] churl. So Golding's Ovid, ' The gods take part against me ;
Bk. i. (ed. 1612, leaf 9) : " I am no could this boor
Carle nor Country Clowne." In As Have held me thus else.'" ""
You Like It, III. v. 108, we have Steevens.
"carlot." " The thought seems to
have been imitated in Philaster [IV. iii. ] :
sc. III. ] CYMBELINE 163
18. re-inforce] Mr. Hart thinks that Scottish husbandman named Hay and
this means not obtain reinforcements, his two sons against the Danes in the
but " renew the attack, " and he cites battle of Loncart, A.D. 976 ( Hol. ii.
the Play of Stuckley ( Simpson's School Hist. Scot. 155, 1 , 48) : " Haie be-
of Shakespeare, i. 207), where, he holding the king • now destitute
believes, the word bears this mean- of the wings. "" Again: " There was
ing. neere to the place of the battell a long
2. I did] Mr. Craig suggests that lane fensed on the sides with ditches
"did " is an error caught from line 1 , and walls made of turfe, through the
and that " I " is the old printing of which the Scots which fled were beaten
"Ay. " down by the enemies on heapes. " The
4. heavens] " So in Judges v. 20 : passage may be read in Boswell- Stone's
' They fought from heaven ; the stars Shakspeare's Holinshed, pp. 15–17.
in their courses fought against Sisera "" 10. slightly, I place a comma
(Steevens). after " slightly " on Vaughan's sug-
5. wings destitute] In the account of gestion ; "touch'd " means, as often,
the battle Shakespeare utilises Holin- "wounded" ; some are mortally, some
shed's account of the services of a slightly, wounded.
164 CYMBELINE LACT V.
16, 17. who deserved ... came to] protect their beauty, or rather fairer
who deserved the nurture ofhis country than those cased in masks for pre-
for as many years as his white beard servation of the complexion or for
indicated. modesty (as in the theatre where ladies
20. country base] " Also prisoner's wore masks). Hanmer needlessly read7
base . A popular game among " For shame Make good the passage,'
boys ; it is played by two sides, who cry'd. "
occupy contiguous ' bases ' or ' homes ' ; 24. harts] Ingleby reads with F
any player running out from his ' base "hearts, " understandingit as " courage. "
is chased by one of the opposite side,"1 25. To darkness • .] This is an
and, if caught, made a prisoner assertion of fact, not an imprecation.
(New Eng. Dict. ) . Compare Venus and Pope and other editors, however, end
Adonis, line 303 : " To bid the wind a the sentence with a note of exclamation.
base he now prepares. " So Patten, 27. beastly] See III. iii. 40.
Expedition into Scotland (Arber, 27, 28. save .. frown] may avert
English Garner, iii. 133) : " like the merely by looking back in defiance.
running at base in an uplandish town." For save " Hudson reads “ scape.
21 , 22. With faces ... shame] With Compare Lear, 1. iv. 208 : "too much
faces so fresh as to deserve masks to i' the frown."
SC. III. ] CYMBELINE 165
45. life ... need] what sustained word is common. Compare 3 Henry VI.
life in a time of need. v. ii. 2 : " For Warwick was a bug
47. Some ... friends] F has " Some that fear'd us all. ”
slaine before some dying ; some their 53. Nay, do not] Theobald read
Friends ". We may understand the 66
Nay, do but " ; Staunton conjectures
word " "some " in each of the three " Ay, do but " ; Ingleby makes it a
instances to refer to those wounded, question 66 Nay, do you " ; Hanmer
not those who wound ; but the third inserted " tho"" before " you " in this
" some may possibly be nominative line. Vaughan suggests " They do
to "wound understood. It seems, not," but prefers to emend at the end
however, quite possible that each ofthe line, reading " mad " for " made."
"some" may refer to those who wound The text above may be understood—
-some who feigned death, some really so Vaughan puts it-as a command,
dying, some trampled down in the followed by a reproachful explanation
former rush-friends of those dying of its necessity.
ten, who had been chased by one, etc. 61. made] referring to the " made "
49. slaughter-man] butchers, as in of line 53, which seems to me to
King Henry V. III. iii. 41. negative Vaughan's proposed " mad "
51. bugs] causes of terror. The in line 53.
SC. III . ] CYMBELINE 167
First Gaol. You shall not now be stol'n, you have locks
upon you :
So graze as you find pasture.
Sec. Gaol. Ay, or a stomach.
[Exeunt Gaolers.
Post. Most welcome, bondage ! for thou art a way,
I think, to liberty : yet am I better
powers,
If you will take this audit, take this life,
And cancel these cold bonds. O Imogen !
I'll speak to thee in silence. [ Sleeps.
31. flies] Compare King Lear, IV. i. (Pope) ; " from my womb " (Johnson
38: 66 As flies to wanton boys are we conj . ) ; 'from my waist " (Vaughan
to the gods, They kill us for their conj . ). Steevens quotes from The
sport. " Devil's Charter, 1607, by Barnabe
42. earth-vexing] Vaughan ingeni- Barnes :
ously conjectures " heart-vexing, the "What wouldst thou run again into
" h of " heart " having got into the my womb?
wrong place at the end of the word. If thou wert there, thou shouldst
But a ghost may speak of smarts as be Posthumus
earth-vexing in contrast to the calm of And ript out of my sides. "
Elysium ; see line 97. 46. his foes] mankind, who have
45. from me was] "from me my " turned against him.
sc. Iv. ] CYMBELINE 173
55. fruitful] Rowe reads " rival " ; Leonati ; Capell reads " Leonati' " ;
Vaughanconjectures " frontful." Thisel- Pope " Leonatus'."
ton writes : 66 Having regard to 64. Slight] worthless, contemptible ;
' mature for man ' there can be so Julius Cæsar, IV. iii . 37 : " Away,
no doubt as to the interpreta- slight man.
tion. " 67. geck] dupe, as in Twelfth Night,
57. deem] judge, estimate ; "dignity, ” v. i. 351 : " the most notorious geck
worth. and gull.'""
60. Leonati seat] the seat of the 69. came] Dyce (ed. 2) reads " come."
174 CYMBELINE [ACT V.
113. palace crystalline] So Edwards, 118. prunes] picks off loose feathers
Cephalus and Procris, 1595 : " And to smooth the plumage ; Cox, Gentle-
now heaven's cope, Jove's palace man's Recreation, " Faulconers
"" Terms" : " Pruneth is when the Hawk
chrystaline.'
116. foot] seize or clutch with the picketh herself."
talons. Turberville, Faulconrie, 130 : 118. cloys] Madden, Diary ofWilliam
" Throw her out the leure and let hir Silence, p. 137 n. , quotes from Harting's
foote a henne . . . and kill it.' Cox, Ornithology of Shakespeare : " Cloys
The Gentleman's Recreation, 1686, " Of is doubtless a misprint for ' cleys, ' that
Hawks, " p. 19 : " The Faulcon, Ger- is, ' claws. ' Those who have kept
faulcon, Mylion, Merlin and Hobby hawks must often have observed the
do stoop and seize their Prey with habit which they have of raising one
their foot." foot, and whetting the beak against
116. ascension] In descending his it."
breath was sulphurous ; now in his 120. marble pavement] Holt White
ascending the odour is sweeter than quotes Heywood, Troia Britannica,
that of our flowery fields of Ely- 1609, xii. 77 : "the marble floors of
sium. heaven."
SC. IV. ] CYMBELINE 177
Re-enter Gaolers.
151. Re-enter Gaolers] Capell, Enter Gaoler F. 152. First Gaol. ] Capell,
Gao. F.
tix, opening scene. So among the pro- tie" the mysterious communication in
verbs in Camden's Remains : " By a dream. Walker proposes " nothing ;
wisdom peace, by peace plenty. ' or A senseless," ending line 147 with
147. Tongue] used also in Measure " or."
forMeasure, IV. iv. 28, but there in the 150. The action . · like it] like it
sense of bitterly reproach with the in being strange, mysterious, unin-
tongue. telligible.
147. eitherboth, or nothing] Vaughan 151. sympathy] the correspondency,
conjectures " either of both " -and resemblance, between the two. The
probably he is right- meaning either meaning is common in Shakespeare.
of the two, citing from North's Plutarch The first meaning of " sympathy " in
an example ( Paulus Emylius, p. 246) ; Bullokar's Expositor is "a likenesse
perhaps Rowe's reading " Tis either in quantity."
both, " altered by putting a comma 154. Hanging word] So Julius
after "either "_"'Tis either, both, or Casar, v. v. 4 : 66 slaying is the word. "
nothing "-is possible : 'Tis either a 155. well cooked] perhaps prepared
dream, or mad stuff, or mad stuff uttered in soul for death by spiritual " cookery "
in a dream, or nothing. Lines 148, (W. J. Craig).
149 describe in " senseless speaking' 157. shot] contribution, scot ; see for
the stuff that madmen tongue, and in a play on the word, 1 Henry IV. v.
"6 iii. 31.
speaking such as sense cannot un-
SC. IV.] CYMBELINE 179
Enter a Messenger.
183. Your death] "does not mean vii. 7 : " We 'ld jump the life to
' death in your case' • it is the come ; so to put to the jump, " to
simple equivalent of ' death ' in the venture or put to the trial.
abstract. So [Hamlet, I. v. 167] ' your 193. wink] See 11. iii. 25.
philosophy"" (Vaughan). 194. infinite mock] Compare Hamlet,
186. or to take] Heath conjectured v. i. 204 : "infinite jest."
and Capell read " or take " ; Vaughan 196. hanging's]
"" F 3 has " such
proposes 66 or so take. " hanging's.'
187. jump] hazard, as in Macbeth, 1.
SC. IV. ] CYMBELINE 181
201. made free] that is by death, 209. them] Romans, who shrink so
which Posthumus now expects will not little from death.
be delayed. 212. gallowses] "doubtless," says
206. prone] eagerly inclined. Steev- Rolfe, " intended as a vulgar plural. '
ens quotes from Gorges' Lucan, vi. : 214. preferment] my wish includes
" Thessalian fierie steeds as part of it a better post for myself.
For use of war so prone and fit."
182 CYMBELINE [ACT V.
5. targes of proof] shields of proof 14. liver, heart, and brain] the great
(tested and proved impenetrable) ; vital organs. Compare Twelfth Night,
targes, a monosyllable, or almost such. I. i. 37 :
Capell read " targe." " How will she love .
10. poor looks] Theobald, on War- when liver, brain, and heart,
burton's suggestion, read " poor luck " ; These sovereign thrones, are all
Vaughan proposes " pale looks, " as in supplied."
v. iii. 34. 66 Poor looks "" means On liver and heart, see Fletcher's
a dejected visage. Compare King Purple Island, Canto iii. and notes.
Richard II. III. iii. 128 : " To look so The liver was supposed to be the seat
poorly and to speak so fair. " of the passions, the heart of the affec-
13. heir ofhis reward] the inheritor tions, the brain of the reason.
of what he should have received as a 16. of whence] from where.
reward from me.
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 183
36. finish'd] died. Compare line 412, and also in the sense of artful, ingenious
and Antony and Cleopatra, v. ii. 193 : -"a delicate stratagem " ; KingLear,
" Finish good lady," i.e. die. IV. vi. 188. I take it to mean in-
38. Affected] loved, as often. genious here.
42. opening] disclosing. 50. mortal mineral] deadly mineral
43. bore in hand] beguiled with a poison. Compare Othello, I. ii. 74 and
pretence, as in Hamlet, II . ii. 67, and " a poisonous mineral ") II . i. 306.
Macbeth, III. i. 81 : " How you were So Chapman, Alphonsus, v. ii.: " that
borne in hand, how cross'd. " Ingleby adulterous Palsgrave and my wife. ... . .
quotes many examples, and adds " The Gave me a mineral," and Jonson,
earlier form was ' bear on hand, ' which Golden Age Restored:
is frequently used in The Paston Letters "Nor barren fern, nor mandrake
and in Chaucer." low
46. prevented] anticipated, as in Nor mineral to kill."
Julius Cæsar, v. i. 105 : “ so to pre- 51. ling ring] F has commas after
vent The time of life." " life" and "ling'ring." Perhaps
47. delicate] used by Shakespeare in Vaughan is right in regarding " ling r.
the sense of beautiful or graceful- " a ing' as transitive in concord with
delicate wench," Tempest, II. i. 43 ; "which " and together with " waste
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 185
95. own ; . .. wherefore,] owne. I know not why, wherefore, F (see note
below).
128 : " tender o'er his follies, " that is, included " and art " in line 94, and
with respect to his follies ; 66 occasion read " Mine own. I know not why,
meaning "need" is common. It is nor wherefore, but I say" (ending line
possible, however, that the words may 95 with " but "). Steevens, in later
mean so tender over and above what editions, read " wherefore, I say."
might be required of a page. Staunton Vaughan proposes :
conjectures " occasions true." "And art mine own, I know not
88. feat] " ready, dexterous in wait- why : wherefore
ing" (Johnson). Compare Winter's To say ' live ' boy ne'er thank thy
Tale, Iv. iv. 176 : " She dances featly." master : live !'
Thiselton cites "unfeatie fellows," He takes "thy master" to mean the
awkward fellows, from Sidney's Ar- King, who"" with the words " And art
cadia ( 1613 ?), p. 99. mine own receives Fidele into his
92-94. And ... grace ] Ingleby
66 me ends service. Thiselton explains F text :
lines with " surely " I know not why I feel so drawn to
66 grace.'"" thee, and therefore thou hast not to
93. favour] face, as often. thank thy master (Lucius) for thy being
94. look'd ... grace] won my favour bidden to live ; it rests entirely with
by your looks. me who now say ' live. " I under-
95. own ; wherefore,] The stand " I know not why " to refer to
punctuation is mine ; " nor " was in the preceding words, and " I know
troduced by Rowe, who read " own. I not to be understood before " where-
know not why, nor wherefore, ". Capell fore. " I take Lucius to be " thy master."
188 CYMBELINE [ACT V.
103. a thing] the ring given to assigns these words to Cymbeline, the
Posthumus. speech of Lucius closing with the
108. Why ... perplex'd?] Ingleby rhymed tag.
sc. v.] CYMBELINE 189
205. got it] got F. 208, 209. Whereupon- .... now--] Johnson, Where-
ироп, now . F. 209. Advancing] omitted F. 214. Thou, king]
Theobald , Thou King F.
199. practice] treachery, artifice ; as That's due" mean " let me name my.
in Much Ado, IV. i. 190, and often. self not merely fool, murderer, thief,
200. simular] counterfeit, speciously but any thing that is applicable to
false. Compare "simular man (Q, villains. "
' simular ' F) of virtue " in KingLear, 214. justicer] judge, as in King Lear,
III. ii. 54. III. vi. 59 : " False justicer, why hast
203. averring] avouching. Johnson thou let her scape ?" Steevens cites
and others, however, regard it as an " a justicer upright " from Warner,
adjective qualifying ,," notes " and mean- Albion's England ( 1602), x. liv. Lam-
ing " confirmatory.' barde in Eirenarchia (quoted by
208. ta'en the forfeit ] enjoyed what Rushton, Shakespeare illustrated by
was forfeited by the broken bond. Old Authors, Part ii. p. 53) comments
210. Ay me] Staunton proposes on the origin of the word " justicer. "
" Give me ― most thief- any 216. amend] The thought that a great
thing. " But the words " any thing crime or sin makes slighter sins look
sc. v.] CYMBELINE 195
As good as we ?
Arv. In that he spake too far.
297. mine] i.e. my head. jectured "C sense ; Singer (ed. 2) reads
66 score " in the sense of " credit " ;
297. sorry] The " sorrow" ofF maybe ""
right. "Shakespeare, " writes Vaughan, Hudson rashly reads " scorse, an
" when he desires to represent a person obsolete word used in the sense of
affected by any condition in a high " bargain, exchange, offset, equiva-
degree, styles him by the name of the lent, payment. "
abstract condition itself. Thus 308. tasting of our wrath] testing,
' miseries,' ' vanities, ' and ' sins ' all making trial, making an experiment of
instead of ' miserable, ' ' vain,' etc." our wrath. Hanmer's " tempting "
In King Lear, IV. vi. 262, " I am and Warburton's "hasting "" are not
only sorry" (F), we find " sorrow " in needed. Compare Twelfth Night, III.
Q I. iv. 267, " to taste their valour. " Mr.
305. scar] than to deserve which a Craig conjectures " tainting ""of our
company of Clotens ever received worth." Perhaps tasting here
wound. F ""' scarre.'"" Collier con- means merely "experiencing. ”
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 201
377. brothers] F, Brother F 2. 378. When ye] Rowe (ed. 2), When we
F. 386. brothers] Rowe (ed. 2), Brother F. 387. whither? These,]
Theobald, whether these ? F.
378. When ye] Johnson says that if "fierce endeavour of your wit. "
F " we " be right, the words " When Collier conjectures " forc'd " ; Keight-
we were so indeed " must be given to ley " first. "
Arviragus. 384. Distinction · in] in which
380. he] Hanmer reads " she." a consideration of parts and details
381. O rare instinct !] S. Walker should find ample material.
would omit "O," and let the 385. when] Johnson ( 1771 ) reads
accent, as was usual, fall on the second " whence."
syllable of “ instinct ” ; but probably 388. your three motives] equivalent
"swallow'd " counts as a single syllable. to " the motives of you three." Com-
382. fierce] Johnson explains " fierce" pare All's Well, 1. iii. 169 : " both our
here as "vehement," "rapid " ; mothers," i.e. the mother of us both.
Schmidt as " wild, disordered, irregu- 390. by-dependances] our word " side-
lar." We have in Shakespeare " fierce issues " comes near the meaning. Capell
vanities," "'fierce wretchedness," read " by-dependancies. "
206 CYMBELINE [ACT V.
place
Will serve our long inter'gatories. See,
Posthumus anchors upon Imogen ;
And she, like harmless lightning, throws her eye
On him, her brothers, me, her master, hitting 395
Each object with a joy : the counterchange
Is severally in all. Let's quit this ground,
And smoke the temple with our sacrifices.
[ To Belarius] Thou art my brother ; so we'll hold
thee ever.
Imo. You are my father too ; and did relieve me, 400
To see this gracious season.
Cym. All o'erjoy'd,
Save these in bonds : let them be joyful too,
For they shall taste our comfort.
Imo. My good master,
I will yet do you service.
Luc. Happy be you !
Cym. The forlorn soldier that so nobly fought, 405
392. intergatories] Malone, Interrogatories F. 399. To Belarius] Rowe.
400. father] F, Mother F 2. 405. so] F 2, no F.
392. intergatories] The word is pro- 398. smoke] perfume with smoke, as
nounced in The Merchant of Venice, v. in Much Ado, 1. iii. 61.
i. 298, as one of five syllables, the 405. forlorn] I think this means lost,
spelling being "intergatories " F, not to be found ; but it was also used
"intergotories " Qq 1 , 2. (as in " forlorn hope " ) of soldiers who
393. anchors] So Measure for dared the utmost peril. New Eng.
Measure, II. iv. 3 : " my invention Dict. cites Barret, Theor. Warres
... Anchors on Isabel. " ( 1598), II. i. 17 : " certain forlorne
395. On ... hitting] The punc- Sentinels, " and from Holinshed :
tuation is Rowe's. F "On him : " Fortie or fiftie forlorne boies." Rolfe
her Brothers, Me : her Master hit- writes : " Accented on the first syllable
ting. " before the noun, as in Sonnets, xxxiii.
396, 397. the counterchange ... all] 7, and Two Gentlemen of Verona, I. ii.
the reciprocation is in all, and in- 124."
dividually in each.
sc. v. ] CYMBELINE 207
406. becomed] "become" (Warburton); example of its use in this sense cited in
"but the form occurs also in Romeo New Eng. Dict.
and Juliet, IV. ii. 26, and Antony and 409. fitment] explained by New Eng.
Cleopatra, III. vii. 27 " (Rolfe). Dict. as "a making fit, preparation " ;
407. I am, sir, ] The verse has been and no other example in this sense is
regulated by Pope, ""Tis I am, cited ; others explain it as garb, equip-
sir" ; Keightley, " I am, great sir ” ment.
Vaughan proposes " I am, sir, he-," 412. finish] See line 36 of this
comparing line 410. scene.
409. beseeming] appearance ; used by 421. freeness] generosity ; used by
Shakespeare only here, and no other Shakespeare only here.
208 CYMBELINE [ACT V.
" THINK THAT YOU ARE UPON A ROCK " (V. v. 262).
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