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The counterfeit prefentment of two brothers.
See, what a grace was feated on this brow:
Hyperion's curls; the front of Jove himself;
An eye like Mars, to threaten and command;
A ftation like the herald Mercury,
New-lighted on a heaven-kiffing hill7;
A combination, and a form, indeed,
Where every god did feem to fet his feal,

The introduction of miniatures in this place appears to be a modern innovation. A print prefixed to Rowe's edition of Hamlet, publifhed in 1709, proves this. There, the two royal portraits are exhibited as half-lengths, hanging in the Queen's clofet; and either thus, or as whole lengths, they probably were exhibited from the time of the original performance of this tragedy to the death of Betterton. To halflengths, however, the fame objection lies, as to miniatures. MALONE. 6 Hyperion's curls;-] It is obfervable that Hyperion is used by Spenfer with the fame error in quantity. FARMER.

I have never met with an earlier edition of Marston's Infatiate Countess than that in 1603. In this the following lines occur, which bear a close resemblance to Hamlet's defcription of his father:

"A donative he hath of every god;

"Apollo gave him locks, Jove his high front." STEEVENS. 7 Aftation like the herald Mercury,

New-lighted on a heaven-kifling hill;] I think it not improbable that Shakspeare caught this image from Phaer's tranflation of Virgil, (Fourth Eneid,) a book that without doubt he had read:

"And now approaching neere, the top he feeth and mighty lims “ Of Atlas, mountain tough, that heaven on boyft'rous boulders beares ;

"There firft on ground with wings of might doth Mercury arrive, "Then down from thence right over feas himselfe doth headlong drive."

In the margin are thefe words: "The defcription of Mercury's jour ney from beaven, along the mountain Atlas in Afrike, bigbeft on earth. MALONE.

Station in this inftance does not mean the spot where any one is placed, but the aft of ftanding. So, in Antony and Cleopatra, Act III. fc. iii. Her motion and her ftation are as one."

On turning to Theobald's first edition, I find that he had made the fame remark, and fupported it by the fame inftance. The obfervation is neceffary, for otherwife the compliment defigned to the attitude of the king, would be bestowed on the place where Mercury is reprefented as standing. STEEVENS.

In the first scene of Timon of Athens, the poet, admiring a picture, introduces the fame image:

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How this grace

Speaks his own ftanding !" MALONE.

To

To give the world affurance of a man:

This was your husband.-Look you now, what follows:
Here is your husband; like a mildew'd ear,
Blafting his wholesome brother. Have you eyes?
Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed,
And batten on this moor? Ha! have you eyes?
You cannot call it, love: for, at your age,
The hey-day in the blood' is tame, it's humble,
And waits upon the judgment; And what judgment
Would step from this to this? Senfe, fure, you have,
Elfe, could you not have motion 2: But, fure, that fenfe
Is apoplex'd: for madness would not err;

Nor fenfe to ecftafy was ne'er fo thrall'd,
But it referv'd fome quantity of choice,

8- like a mildew'd ear,

Blafting bis wholefome brother.] This alludes to Pharaob's dream in the 41ft chapter of Genefis. STEEVENS.

9-batten- i. e. to grow fat. So, in Claudius Tiberius Nero, 1607. and for milk

"I batten'd was with blood." Bat is an ancient word for increase. often used by Drayton in his Polyolbion. The hey-day in the blood-] This

Pity fhe's a Whore, 1633:

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Hence the adjective batful, fo
STEEVENS.

expreflion occurs in Ford's 'Tis

"The bey-day of your luxury be fed
"Up to a furfeit?" STEEVENS.

Senfe, fure, you have,

Elfe, could you not have motion:] Thefe words, and the following lines to the word difference, are found in the quarto, but not in the folio. Senfe is fometimes ufed by Shakspeare for fenfation or fenfual appetite; as motion is for the effect produced by the impulfe of nature. Such, think, is the fignification of these words here. So, in Measure for Measure:

66 fhe fpeaks, and 'tis

"Such fenfe, that my fenfe breeds with it."

Again, more appofitely in the fame play, where both the words occur: One who never feels

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"The wanton ftings and motions of the fenfe."

So, in Braithwaite's Survey of Hiftories, 1614: These continent relations will reduce the ftraggling motions to a more fettled and retired harbour."

Senfe has already been used in this fcene, for fenfation:

"That it be proof and bulwark against fenfe."

Dr. Warburton for merian substituted notion, i, e, intellect. MALONE.

Τα

To ferve in fuch a difference. What devil was't,
That thus hath cozen'd you at hoodman-blind3 ?
Eyes without feeling, feeling without fight,
Ears without hand or eyes, fmelling fans all,
Or but a fickly part of one true sense
Could not fo mope".

O fhame! where is thy blush? Rebellious hell,
If thou canst mutine in a matron's bones",
To flaming youth let virtue be as wax,

And melt in her own fire: proclaim no fhame,
When the compulfive ardour gives the charge;
Since froft itself as actively doth burn,

And reafon panders will7.

Queen. O Hamlet, fpeak no more: Thou turn'ft mine eyes into my very

foul;

3-at boodman-blind?] This is, I fuppofe, the fame as blindman'sbaff. So, in Two lamentable Tragedies in One, the One a murder of Mafter Beech, &c. 1601;

"Pick out men's eyes, and tell them that's the sport

"Of bood-man blind." STEEVENS.

4 Eyes without feeling, &c.] This and the three following lines are omitted in the folio. STEEVENS.

5 Could not fo mope.] i. e. could not exhibit fuch marks of stupidity. The fame word is used in the Tempeft, Sc. ult.

6

"And were brought moping hither." STEEVENS.
Rebellious hell,

If thou canst mutine in a matron's bones,] So, in Othello &
"This hand is moift, my lady;—

Hot, hot, and moift: this hand of yours requires

"A fequefter from liberty, fafting and prayer,
"Much caftigation, exercife devout;

"For here's a young and fweating devil here,
"That commonly rebels."

To mutine, for which the modern editors have fubftituted mutiny, was the ancient term, fignifying to rife in mutiny. So, in Knolles's Hiftory of the Turks, 1603: "The Janifaries became wonderfully difcontented, and began to mutine in diverse places of the citie."

MALONE.

7 reafon panders will.] So the folio, I think rightly; but the reading of the quarto is defenfible:

-reafon pardons will. JOHNSON.

Panders was certainly Shakspeare's word. So, in Venus and Adonis: “When reason is the barud to luft's abuse.” MALONE.

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And there I fee fuch black and grained spots,
As will not leave their tin&t9.

Ham. Nay, but to live

In the rank fweat of an enfeamed bed';

Stew'd in corruption; honeying, and making love
Over the nafty stye ;-

Queen. O, fpeak to me no more;

These words like daggers enter in mine ears;
No more, fweet Hamlet.

Ham. A murderer, and a villain :

A flave, that is not twentieth part the tythe
Of your precedent lord:-a vice of kings":
A cutpurfe of the empire and the rule;
That from a shelf the precious diadem ftole3,
And put it in his pocket!

Queen. No more.

Enter Ghoft.

Ham. A king of fhreds and patches *:
Save me, and hover o'er me with your wings,

You heavenly guards!-What would your gracious figure?
Queen. Alas, he's mad.

Ham. Do you not come your tardy fon to chide,
That, laps'd in time and paffion, lets go by

8

grained-] Dyed in grain. JOHNSON.

9 As will not leave their tint.] The quartos read:

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"As will leave there their tinct." STEEVENS.

an enfeamed bed;] Thus the quarto, 1604, and the folio. A later quarto of no authority reads-incestuous bed. Enfeamed bed, as Dr. Johnfon has obferved, is greafy bed. Seam fignifies bogslard. MALONE.

In the Book of Haukyng, &c. bl. 1. no date, we are told that "Esfayme of a hauke is the grece." STEEVENS.

2.- •vice of kings:] A low mimick of kings. The vice is the food of a farce; from whom the modern punch is defcended. JOHNSON. 3 That from a fhelf, &c.] This is faid not unmeaningly, but to shew, that the ufurper came not to the crown by any glorious villainy that carried danger with it, but by the low cowardly theft of a common pilferer. WARBURTON.

A king of foreds and patches:] This is faid, pursuing the idea of the vice of kings. The vice was dreffed as a fool, in a coat of partycoloured patches. JOHNSON.

5-laps'd in time and paffion,- That, having suffered time to flip, and paffion to cool, lets go, &c. JOHNSON.

The

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The important acting of your dread command?
O, fay!

Ghoft. Do not forget: This vifitation
Is but to whet thy almost blunted purpose.
But, look! amazement on thy mother fits:
O, step between her and her fighting foul;
Conceit in weakest bodies strongest works;
Speak to her, Hamlet.

Ham. How is it with you, lady?
Queen. Alas, how is't with you?
That you do bend your eye on vacancy,
And with the incorporal air do hold difcourfe?
Forth at your eyes your fpirits wildly peep;
And, as the fleeping foldiers in the alarm,
Your bedded hair, like life in excrements 7,
Starts up, and stands on end. O gentle fon,
Upon the heat and flame of thy distemper
Sprinkle cool patience. Whereon do you look ?

Ham. On him! on him!-Look you, how pale he glares! His form and caufe conjoin'd, preaching to ftones, Would make them capable .-Do not look upon me;

8

6 Conceit in weakest bodies ftrongest works;] Conceit for imagination. So, in the Rape of Lucreces

"And the conceited painter was fo nice,-,"

See alfo Vol. VI. p. 536, n. 8.

7

MALONE.

like life in excrements,] The hairs are excrementitious, that is, without life or fenfation; yet thofe very hairs, as if they had life, ftart up, &c. POPE.

So, in Macbeth:

"The time has been

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my fell of bair,

Would at a difmal treatise rouse and ftir, "As life were in't." MALONE.

8 His form and caufe conjoin'd, preaching to flones,

Would make them capable.] Capable here fignifies intelligent; ene dued with understanding. So, in King Richard III:

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O, 'tis a parlous boy,

"Bold, quick, ingenious, forward, capable."

We yet ufe capacity in this fenfe. See Vol. VII. p. 122, n. 8.

MALONE.

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