PRO. Hear a little further, And then I'll bring thee to the present business Which now's upon us; ftory without the which, this Were most impertinent, MIRA. Wherefore did they not Well demanded, wench; That hour destroy us? PRO. My tale provokes that queftion, Dear, they durft not; (So dear the love my people bore me) nor fet MIRA. Was I then to you! PRO. Alack! what trouble O! a cherubim Thou waft, that did preferve me! Thou didst smile, Infused with a fortitude from heaven, Wives of Windfor, A&t I. fc. ii: "his cook, or his laundry, or his washer, and his wringer." STEEVENS. 2 of a boat,] The old copy reads-of a butt. HENLEY. It was corrected by Mr. Rowe. MALONE. 3 ·had quit it :] Old copy-have quit it. Corrected by Mr. Rowe. MALONE. To cry to the fea that roar'd to us ;] This conceit occurs again in the Winter's Tale:-"How the poor fouls roar'd, and the fea mock'd them," &c. STEEVENS. When I have deck'd the sea 5 with drops full falt; Under my burden groan'd; which rais'd in me An undergoing ftomach, to bear up Against what should enfue. MIRA. How came we afhore? PRO. By Providence divine. Some food we had, and fome fresh water, that 5-deck'd the fea-] To deck the fea, if explained, to honour, adorn, or dignify, is indeed ridiculous, but the original import of the verb deck, is to cover; fo in fome parts they yet fay deck the table. This fenfe may be borne, but perhaps the poet wrote fleck'd, which I think is still used in ruftic language of drops falling upon water. Dr. Warburton reads mock'd; the Oxford edition brack'd. JOHNSON. Verftegan, p. 61. fpeaking of beer, fays "So the overdecking or covering of beer came to be called berham, and afterwards barme." This very well fupports Dr. Johnfon's explanation. The following paffage in Antony and Cleopatra may countenance the verb deck in its common acceptation: "- do not please fharp fate What is this but decking it with tears? Again, our author's Caliban fays, A&t III. fc. ii x "Which, when he has a house, he'll deck withal." STEEVENS. To deck, I am told, fignifies in the North, to Sprinkle. See Ray's DICT. of North Country words, in verb. to deg, and to deck; and his DICT. of South Country words, in verb. dag. The latter fignifies dew upon the grafs ;-hence daggle-tailed. In Cole's Latin Dictionary, 1679, we find,-" To dag, collutulo, irroro." MALONE. A correfpondent, who figns himself Eboracenfis, propofes that this contefted word fhould be printed degg'd, which, fays he, fignifies Sprinkled, and is in daily ufe in the North of England. When clothes that have been washed are too much dried, it is neceffary to moiften them before they can be ironed, which is always done by Sprinkling; this operation the maidens univerfally call degging. REED. • An undergoing ftomach.] Stomach is ftubborn refolution. So, Horace : gravem Pelida fiomachum." STEEVENS, A noble Neapolitan, Gonzalo, Out of his charity, (who being then appointed "Some food we had, and fome fresh water, that A noble Neapolitan, Gonzalo, Out of his charity, (who being then appointed Mafter of this defign,) did give us ;] Mr. Steevens has fuggefted, that we might better read-he being then appointed; and fo we should certainly now write: but the reading of the old copy is the true one, that mode of phrafelogy being the idiom of Shakspeare's time. So, in the Winter's Tale: 66 This your fon-in-law, "And fon unto the king, (whom heavens directing,) "Is troth-plight to your daughter." Again, in Coriolanus: waving thy hand, "Which, often, thus, correcting thy ftout heart, "That will not hold the handling; or, fay to them," &c. MALONE. I have left the paffage in question as I found it, though with flender reliance on its integrity. What Mr. Malone has ftyled "the idiom of Shakspeare's time," can scarce deserve so creditable a distinction. It should be remembered that the inftances adduced by him in fupport of his pofition are not from the early quartos which he prefers on the fcore of accuracy, but from the folio 1623, the inaccuracy of which, with equal judgement, he has cenfured. The genuine idiom of our language, at its different periods, can only be ascertained by reference to contemporary writers whose works were fkilfully revifed as they paffed through the prefs, and are therefore unfufpected of corruption. A fufficient number of fuch books are before us. If they fupply examples of phrafeology refembling that which Mr. Malone would eftablish, there is an end of controverfy between us: Let, however, the difputed phrafes be brought to their teft before they are admitted; for I utterly refufe to accept the jargon of theatres and the mistakes of printers, as the idiom or grammar of the age in which Shakspeare wrote. Every grofs departure from literary rules may be countenanced, if we are permitted to draw examples from vitiated pages; and our readers, as often as they meet with restorations founded on fuch authorities, may juftly exclaim, with Othello,-" Chaos is come again." STEEVENS. Rich garments, linens, ftuffs, and neceffaries, Which fince have fteaded much; fo, of his gentle nefs, Knowing I lov'd my books, he furnish'd me, I prize above MIRA. my dukedom. But ever fee that man! PRO. 'Would I might Now I arife :8 Sit ftill, and hear the last of our fea-forrow. Here in this island we arriv'd; and here Have I, thy school-mafter, made thee more profit Than other princes9 can, that have more time Now I arife:] Why does Profpero arife? Or, if he does it to ease himself by change of pofture, why need he interrupt his narrative to tell his daughter of it? Perhaps these words belong to Miranda, and we should read: Mir. 'Would I might But ever fee that man!--- Now I arife. Pro. Sit ftill, and hear the last of our fea-forrow. Profpero, in p. 14, had directed his daughter to fit down, and learn the whole of this hiftory; having previously by some magical charm difpofed her to fall afleep. He is watching the progress of this charm; and in the mean time tells her a long ftory, often afking her whether her attention be ftill awake. The story being ended (as Miranda fuppofes) with their coming on fhore, and partaking of the conveniences provided for them by the loyal humanity of Gonzalo, the therefore firft expreifes a wish to see the good old man, and then obferves that the may now arife, as the ftory is done. Profpero, furprized that his charm does not yet work, bids her fit ftill; and then enters on fresh matter to amuse the time, telling her (what she knew before) that he had been her tutor, &c. But foon perceiving her drowfinefs coming on, he breaks off abruptly, and leaves her ftill fitting to her flumbers. BLACKSTONE. As the words" now I arife"-may fignify, "now I rife in my narration,"-" now my ftory heightens in its confequence," I have left the paffage in queftion undisturbed. We still say, that the intereft of a drama rifes or declines. STEEVENS. 9 princes-] The firft folio reads-princeffe. HENLEY, Corrected by Mr. Rowe. MALONE. For vainer hours, and tutors not fo careful. MIRA. Heavens thank you for't! And now, I pray you, fir, (For ftill 'tis beating in my mind,) your reason For raising this fea-storm? PRO. A moft aufpicious ftar; whofe influence choose. Enter ARIEL. ARI. All hail, great mafter! grave fir, hail! I X Now my come dear lady,] i. e. now my aufpicious mistress. 2 I find my zenith doth depend upon 3 A moft aufpicious fiar; whofe influence STEEVENS. If now I court not, but omit, &c.] So, in Julius Cæfar : "There is a tide in the affairs of man, "Which taken at the flood, leads on to fortune; "Omitted, all the voyage of their life "Is bound in fhallows and in miferies." MALONE. 'tis a good dulnefs,] Dr. Warburton rightly obferves, that this fleepinefs, which Profpero by his art had brought upon Miranda, and of which he knew not how foon the effect would begin, makes him queftion her fo often whether she is attentive to his ftory. JOHNSON. |