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A trim exploit, a manly enterprize,
To conjure tears up in a poor maid's eyes,
With your derifion! none, of noble fort,
Would fo offend a virgin; and extort
A poor foul's patience,' all to make you sport.
Lys. You are unkind, Demetrius; be not so;
For you love Hermia; this, you know, I know:
And here, with all good will, with all my heart,
In Hermia's love I yield you up my part;
And yours of Helena to me bequeath,
Whom I do love, and will do to my death.

HEL. Never did mockers wafte more idle breath.
DEM. Lyfander, keep thy Hermia; I will none:
If e'er I lov'd her, all that love is gone.
My heart with her but, as gueft-wise, fojourn'd;
And now to Helen it is home return'd, "

3 A trim exploit, a manly enterprize, &c.] This is written much in the manner and fpirit of Juno's reproach to Venus in the fourth book of the Eneid:

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Fgregiam vero laudem & fpolia ampla refertis, "Tuque puerque tuus; magnum & memorabile nomen, "Una dolo divûm fi fœmina vida duorum eft."

STEEVENS.

·none, of noble fort,] Sort is here used for degree or quality. So, in the old ballad of Jane Shore:

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Long time I lived in the court,

"With lords and ladies of great fort." MALONE.

-extort

A poor foul's patience,] Harrals, torment. JOHNSON.

6 My heart with her but, as guest-wife, fojourn'd;

And now to Helen it is home return'd,] The ancient copies read to her." Dr. Johnfou made the correction, and exemplified the fentiment by the following paffage from Prior:

No matter what beauties I faw in my way;
They were but my vifits; but thou art my home."

So, in our author's 109th Sonnet:

"This is my home of love; if I have rang'd,

STEEVENS.

"Like him that travels, I return again." MALONE.

There to remain.

LYS.

Helen, it is not fo.

DEM. Difparage not the faith thou doft not know, Left, to thy peril, thou aby it dear.

Look, where thy love comes; yonder is thy dear.

Enter HERMIA.

HER. Dark night, that from the eye his function
takes,

The ear more quick of apprehenfion makes;
Wherein it doth impair the seeing sense,
It pays the hearing double recompence:-
Thou art not by mine eye, Lyfander, found;
Mine ear, I thank it, brought me to thy found.
But why unkindly did'ft thou leave me fo?

Lys. Why fhould he ftay, whom love doth press
to go?

HER. What love could prefs Lyfander from my
fide?

Lys. Lyfander's love, that would not let him bide,
Fair Helena; who more engilds the night
Than all yon fiery oes and eyes of light.
Why feek'st thou me? could not this make thee know,
The hate I bare thee made me leave thee fo?

all yon fiery oes-] Shakspeare ufes O for a circle. So, in the prologue to K. Henry V.

can we crowd

"Within this little 0, the very cafques

"That did affright the air at Agincourt?"

Again, in The Partheneia Sacra, 1633:

the purple canopy of the earth, powder'd over and beset

with filver oes, or rather an azure vault," &c. STEEVENS.

D'Ewes's Journal of Queen Elizabeth's Parliaments, p. 650, mentions a patent to make fpangles and oes of gold; and I think haberdashers call small curtain rings, O's, as being circular. TOLLET.

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HER. You fpeak not as you think; it cannot be. HEL. Lo, fe is one of this confederacy! Now I perceive they have conjoin'd, all three, To fashion this falfe fport in fpite of me. Injurious Hermia! most ungrateful maid! Have you confpir'd, have you with thefe contriv'd To bait me with this foul derifion?

Is all the counfel that we two have fhar'd,

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The fifters' vows, the hours that we have spent, When we have chid the hafly-footed time

For parting us,-O, and is all forgot?'

All school-days friendship, childhood innocence? We, Hermia, like two artificial gods,

Have with our neelds created both one flower,

8 The [flers vows,] We might read more elegantly,—The fifter vows, and a few lines lower,-All School-day friendship. The latter emendation was made by Mr. Pope; but changes merely for the fake of elegance ought to be admitted with great caution.

MALONE.

For parting us,-0, and is all forgot?] The first folio omits the word - and. I have received it from the folio 1632. Mr. Malone reads-now. STELVENS.

The editor of the fecond folio, to complete the metre, introduced the word and; O, and is all forgot?' It stands fo aukwardly, that I am perfuaded it was not the author's word. MALONE.

O, and is all forgot?] Mr. Gibbon obferves, that in a poem of Gregory Nazianzen on his own life, are fome beautiful lines which burft from the heart, and fpeak the pangs of injured and loft friendship, refembling thefe. He adds " Shakspeare had never read the poems of Gregory Nazianzen: he was ignorant of the Greek language; but his mother tongue, the language of na-. ture, is the fame in Cappadocia and in Britain."

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Gibbon's Hift. Vol. XIII. p. 277. REED. artificial gods,] Artificial is ingenious, artful.

STEEVENS.

3 Have with our neelds, &c.] Most of our modern editors, with the old copies, have-needles; but the word was probably written by Shakspeare needs, (a common contradion in the inland counties at this day) otherwife the verfe will be inharmonious. See Gammer Gurton's Needle.

Both on one fampler, fitting on one cushion,
Both warbling of one fong, both in one key;
As if our hands, our fides, voices, and minds,
Had been incorporate. So we grew together,
Like to a double cherry, feeming parted;
But yet a union in partition,

Two lovely berries moulded on one stem:
So, with two seeming bodies, but one heart;
Two of the first, like coats in heraldry,
Due but to one, and crowned with one creft.*

Again, in fir Arthur Gorges' tranflation of Lucan, 1614: "Thus Cato spake, whose feeling words

"Like pricking neelds, or points of fwords," &c. Again, in Stanyhurft's Virgil, 1582:

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The fame ideas occur in Pericles Prince of Tyre, 1609:

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the

"Would ever with Marina be:

"Be't when they weav'd the fleded filk,
"With fingers long, fmall, white as milk,
"Or when she would with sharp neeld wound
"The cambrick," &c.

Again, ibid.

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Deep clerks she dumbs, and with her neele compofes "Nature's own shape."

In the age of Shakspeare many contra&ions were used. Ben Jonfon has wher for whether in the prologue to his Sad Shepherd; and in the earl of Sterline's Darius is fport for fupport, and twards for towards.

Of the evisceration and extenfion of words, however, T. Churchyard affords the most numerous and glaring inftances; for he has not fcrupled even to give us rune inftead of ruin, and miest instead of mift, when he wants rhimes to foon, and crieft. STEEVENS.

In the old editions of these plays many words of two fyllables are printed at length, though intended to be pronounced as one. Thus fpirit is almost always fo written, though often used as a monofyllable; and whether, though intended often to be contracted, is always, (I think, improperly,) written at length. MALONE.

4 Two of the firft, like coats in heraldry, ·

Due but to one, and crowned with one creft.] The old copies read-life coats, &c. 3TEEVENS.

And will you rent our ancient love afunder,
To join with men in fcorning your poor friend?
It is not friendly, 'tis not maidenly:

Our fex, as well as I, may chide you for it;
Though I alone do feel the injury.

HER. I am amazed at your paffionate words:
I fcorn you not; it feems that you fcorn me.
HEI. Have you not fet Lyfander, as in scorn,
To follow me, and praife my eyes and face?
And made your other love, Demetrius,
(Who even but now did fpurn me with his foot,)
To call me goddefs, nymph, divine, and rare,
Precious, celeflial? Wherefore fpeaks he this
To her he hates? and wherefore doth Lyfander
Deny your love, fo rich within his foul,
And tender me, forfooth, affection;
But by your fetting on, by your consent?
What though I be not fo in grace as you,
So hung upon with love, fo fortunate;

The true correction of the paffage I owe to the friendship and communication of the ingenious Martin Folkes, clq.-Two of the firft, fecond, &c. are terms peculiar in heraldry, to diftinguifh the different quarterings of coats. THEOBALD.

Thefe are, as Theobald obferves, terms peculiar to heraldry; but that obfervation does not help to explain them.-Every branch of a family is called a house; and none but the first of the first houfe can bear the arms of the family, without fome diftinction. Two of the first, therefore, means two coats of the first house, which are properly due but to one. M. MASON.

According to the rules of heraldry, the first house only, (e. g. a father who has a fon living, or an elder brother as diftinguished from a younger,) has a right to bear the family coat. The fon's coat is diftinguifhed from the father's by a label; the younger brother's from the elder's by a mullet. The fame creft is common to both. Helena therefore means to fay, that she and her friend were as closely united, as much one perfon, as if they were both of the first house; as if they both had the privilege due but to one perfon, (viz. to him of the firft houfe,) the right of bearing the family coat without any diftinguishing mark. MALONE.

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