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But to be known and hated. So, like gross terms,
The prince will, in the perfectness of time,
Cast off his followers: and their memory
Shall as a pattern or a measure live,

By which his grace must mete the lives of others;
Turning past evils to advantages.

K. Hen. 'Tis seldom when the bee doth leave her comb
In the dead carrion.5-Who's here? Westmoreland?
Enter WESTMORELAND.

West. Health to my sovereign! and new happiness
Added to that that I am to deliver!

Prince John, your son, doth kiss your grace's hand:
Mowbray, the bishop Scroop, Hastings, and all,
Are brought to the correction of your law;
There is not now a rebel's sword unsheath'd,
But peace puts forth her olive every where.
The manner how this action hath been borne,
Here at more leisure may your highness read;
With every course, in his particular.6

K. Hen. O Westmoreland, thou art a summer bird,
Which ever in the haunch of winter sings

The lifting up of day. Look! here's more news.
Enter HARCOURT.

Har. From enemies heaven keep your majesty;
And, when they stand against you, may they fall
As those that I am come to tell you of!

59 'Tis seldom, when the bee &c.] As the bee having once placed her comb in a carcase, stays by her honey, so he that has once taken pleasure in bad company, will continue to associate with those that have the art of pleasing him. Johnson.

6 in his particular.] We should read, I thiuk-in this particular; that is, in this detail, in this account, which is minute and distinct. Johnson.

His is used for its, very frequently in the old plays. The modern editors have too often made the change; but it should be remembered, (as Dr. Johnson has elsewhere observed) that by repeated changes the history of a language will be lost. Steevens.

It may certainly have been used so here, as in almost every other page of our author. Mr. Henley, however, observes, that his particular may mean the detail contained in the letter of Prince John. A Particular is yet used as a substantive, by legal conveyancers, for a minute detail of things singly enumerated.

Malone.

A

The earl Northumberland, and the lord Bardolph,
With a great power of English, and of Scots,
Are by the sheriff of Yorkshire overthrown:
The manner and true order of the fight,
This packet, please it you, contains at large.

K. Hen. And wherefore should these good news make me sick?

Will fortune never come with both hands full,
But write her fair words still in foulest letters?
She either gives a stomach, and no food,—
Such are the poor, in health; or else a feast,
And takes away the stomach,—such are the rich,
That have abundance, and enjoy it not.

I should rejoice now at this happy news;

[Swoons.

And now my sight fails, and my brain is giddy:-
O me! come near me, now I am much ill.
P. Humph. Comfort, your majesty!

Cla.

O my royal father! West. My sovereign lord, cheer up yourself, look up! War. Be patient, princes; you do know, these fits Are with his highness very ordinary.

Stand from him, give him air; he 'll straight be well.
Cla. No, no; he cannot long hold out these pangs:

The incessant care and labour of his mind
Hath wrought the mure," that should confine it in,

7 Hath wrought the mure, &c.] i. e. the wall. Pope. Wrought it thin, is made it thin by gradual detriment. Wrought is the preterite of work.

Mure is a word used by Heywood, in his Brazen Age, 1613: "Till I have scal'd these mures, invaded Troy."

Again, in his Golden Age, 1611:

"Girt with a triple mure of shining brass."

Again, in his Iron Age, 2d Part, 1632:

"Through mures and counter-mures of men and steel." Again, in Dyonese Settle's Last Voyage of Capteine Frobisher, 12mo. bl. 1. 1577: "- the streightes seemed to be shutt up with a long mure of yce

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The same thought occurs in Daniel's Civil Wars, &c. Book IV. Daniel is likewise speaking of the sickness of K. Henry IV: "As that the walls worn thin, permit the mind

"To look out thorow, and his frailtie find."

The first edition of Daniel's poem is dated earlier than this play of Shakspeare.

Waller has the same thought:

So thin, that life looks through, and will break out.

"The soul's dark cottage, batter'd and decay'd,

"Lets in the light thro' chinks that time has made."

Steevens.

On this passage the elegant and learned Bishop of Worcester has the following criticism: "At times we find him (the imita tor) practising a different art; not merely spreading as it were and laying open the same sentiment, but adding to it, and by a new and studied device improving upon it. In this case we naturally conclude that the refinement had not been made, if the plain and simple thought had not preceded and given rise to it. You will apprehend my meaning by what follows. Shakspeare had said of Henry the Fourth:

"The incessant care and labour of his mind

'Hath wrought the mure, that should confine it in,

'So thin, that life looks through, and will break out.' "You have here the thought in its first simplicity. It was not unnatural, after speaking of the body as a case or tenement of the soul, the mure that confines it, to say, that as that case wears away and grows thin, life looks through, and is ready to break out."

After quoting the lines of Daniel, who, (it is observed) "by refining on this sentiment, if by nothing else, shews himself to be the copyist," the very learned writer adds,-"here we see, not simply, that life is going to break through the infirm and much-worn habitation, but that the mind looks through, and finds his frailty, that it discovers that life will soon make his escape-Daniel's improvement then looks like the artifice of a man that would outdo his master. Though he fails in the attempt; for his ingenuity betrays him into a false thought. The mind, looking through, does not find its own frailty, but the frailty of the building it inhabits." Hurd's Dissertation on the Marks of

Imitation.

This ingenious criticism, the general principles of which cannot be controverted, shows, however, how dangerous it is to suffer the mind to be led too far by an hypothesis:-for after all, there is very good reason to believe that Shakspeare, and not Daniel, was the imitator. "The Dissention between the Houses of Yorke and Lancaster, in verse, penned by Samuel Daniel," was entered on the Stationers' books by Simon Waterson, in October, 1594, and four books of his work were printed in 1595. The lines quoted by Mr. Steevens are from the edition of The Civil Wars, in 1609. Daniel made many changes in his poems in every new edition. In the original edition in 1595, the versus run thus; Book III, st. 116:

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Wearing the wall so thin, that now the mind

"Might well look thorough, and his frailty find." His is used for its, and refers not to mind, (as is supposed above) but to wall.-There is no reason to believe that this play was written before 1594, and it is highly probable that Shak

8

P. Humph. The people fear me; for they do observe Unfather'd heirs, and loathly births of nature: The seasons change their manners,1 as the year2 Had found some months asleep, and leap'd them over. Cla. The river hath thrice flow'd,3 no ebb between: And the old folk, time's doting chronicles, Say, it did so, a little time before

That our great grandsire, Edward, síck'd and died. War. Speak lower, princes, for the king recovers. P. Lumph. This apoplex will, certain, be his end. K. Hen. I pray you, take me up, and bear me hence Into some other chamber: softly, 'pray.

[They convey the King to an inner part of the

room, and place him on a bed.

Let there be no noise made, my gentle friends;
Unless some dull and favourable hand

Will whisper musick to my weary spirit.4

speare had read Daniel's poem before he sat down to compose these historical dramas. Malone.

8 The people fear me;] i. e. make me afraid. Warburton. So, in The Merchant of Venice:

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this aspect of mine

"Hath fear'd the valiant." Steevens.

9 Unfather'd heirs,] That is equivocal births; animals that had no animal progenitors; productions not brought forth according to the stated laws of generation. Johnson.

1 The seasons change their manners,] This is finely expressed; alluding to the terms of rough and harsh, mild and soft, applied to weather. Warburton.

2

as the year -] i. e. as if the year, &c. So, in Cymbeline : "He spake of her, as Dian had hot dreams,

"And she alone were cold."

In the subsequent line our author seems to have been thinking of leap-year. Malone.

3 The river hath thrice flow'd.] This is historically true. It happened on the 12th of October, 1411. Steevens.

4 Unless some dull and favourable hand

Will whisper musick to my weary spirit.] So, in the old anonymous King Henry V :

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Depart my chamber,

Steevens.

"And cause some musick to rock me asleep." Unless some dull and favourable hand-] Dull signifies melancholy, gentle, soothing. Johnson.

I believe it rather means producing dullness or heaviness; and consequently sleep. It appears from various parts of our au

War. Call for the musick in the other room.

K. Hen. Set me the crown upon my pillow here.5
Cla. His eye is hollow, and he changes much.
War. Less noise, less noise.

P. Hen.

Enter Prince HENRY.

Who saw the duke of Clarence?

Cla. I am here, brother, full of heaviness.

P. Hen. How now! rain within doors, and none abroad!

How doth the king?

P. Humph. Exceeding ill.

P. Hen.

Tell it him.

Heard he the good news yet?

P. Humph. He alter'd much upon the hearing it."

thor's works, that he thought musick contributed to produce sleep. So, in A Midsummer Night's Dream:

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musick call, and strike more dead

"Than common sleep, of all these five the sense." Again, in Love's Labour's Lost:

"And when love speaks, the voice of all the gods
"Makes heaven drowsy with the harmony."

So also in The Tempest, Act I, when Alonzo, Gonzalo, &c. are to be overpowered by sleep, Ariel, to produce this effect, enters, 'playing solemn musick." Malone.

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5 Set me the crown upon my pillow here.] It is still the custom in France, to place the crown on the King's pillow, when he is dying.

Holinshed, p. 541, speaking of the death of King Henry IV, says: "During this his last sicknesse, he caused his crowne, (as some write) to be set on a pillow at his bed's head, and suddenlie his pangs so sore troubled him, that he laie as though all his vitall spirits had beene from him departed. Such as were about him, thinking verilie that he had beene departed, covered his face with a linnen cloth.

"The prince his sonne being hereof advertised, entered into the chamber, tooke awaie the crowne and departed. The father being suddenlie revived out of that trance, quicklie perceived the lacke of his crowne; and having knowledge that the prince his sonne had taken it awaie, caused him to come before his presence, requiring of him what he meant so to misuse himselfe. The prince with a good audacitie answered; Sir, to mine and all men's judgments you seemed dead in this world, and therefore I as your next heire apparant tooke that as mine owne, and not as yours. Well, faire sonne, (said the king with a great sigh) what right I had to it, God knoweth. Well (said the prince) if you die king, I will have the garland, and trust to keepe it with the sword against all mine enemies, as you have doone," &c. Steevens.

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