Or but allay, the fire of passion. BUCK. Sir, I am thankful to you; and I'll go along By your prescription :-but this top-proud fellow, NOR. Say not, treasonous. BUCK. To the king I'll say't; and make my vouch as strong As shore of rock. Attend. This holy fox, 4 If with the sap of reason you would quench, Or but allay, the fire of passion.] So, in Hamlet: sincere motions,)] Honest indignation, warmth of integrity. Perhaps name not, should be blame not. 6 Whom from the flow of gall I blame not. JOHNSON, for he is equal ravenous,] Equal for equally. Shakspeare frequently uses adjectives adverbially. See King John, Vol. X. p. 523, n. 4. MALONE. 7 his mind and place Infecting one another,] This is very satirical. His mind he represents as highly corrupt; and yet he supposes the contagion of the place of first minister as adding an infection to it, WARBURTON. suggests the king our master-] Suggests, for excites. WARBURTON. So, in King Richard II: "Suggest his soon-believing adversaries." STEEVENS. To this last costly treaty, the interview, That swallow'd so much treasure, and like a glass Did break i' the rinsing. Nor. 'Faith, and so it did. BUCK. Pray, give me favour, sir. This cunning cardinal The articles o'the combination drew, As give a crutch to the dead: But our count-cardinal9 Has done this, and 'tis well; for worthy Wolsey, To the old dam, treason,)-Charles the emperor, 9 our count-cardinal-] Wolsey is afterwards called king cardinal. Mr. Pope and the subsequent editors readcourt-cardinal. MALONE. 1 1 — He privily-] He, which is not in the original copy, was added by the editor of the second folio. MALONE. Does buy and sell his honour as he pleases,2 NOR. I am sorry To hear this of him; and could wish, he were BUCK. No, not a syllable; I do pronounce him in that very shape, Enter BRANDON; a Sergeant at Arms before him, and two or three of the Guard. BRAN. Your office, sergeant; execute it. BUCK. Sir, Lo you, my lord, The net has fall'n upon me; I shall perish Under device and practice. thus the cardinal Does buy and sell his honour as he pleases,] This was a proverbial expression. See King Richard III. Act V. sc. iii. MALONE, 66 The same phrase occurs also in King Henry VI. Part I: from bought and sold lord Talbot." Again, in The Comedy of Errors: "It would make a man as mad as a buck, to be so bought and sold." STEEVENs. Something mistaken in't.] That is, that he were something different from what he is taken or supposed by you to be, Act V: MALONE. -practice.] i. e. unfair stratagem. So, in Othello, "Fallen in the practice of a cursed slave." And in this play, Surrey, speaking of Wolsey, says: "How came his practices to light?" REED. I am sorry BRAN. To see you ta'en from liberty, to look on BUCK. It will help me nothing, To plead mine innocence; for that die is on me, Which makes my whitest part black. The will of heaven Be done in this and all things!-I obey.my lord Aberga'ny, fare you well. king BRAN. Nay, he must bear you company:-The [To ABERGAVENNY. Is pleas'd, you shall to the Tower, till you know How he determines further. ABER. As the duke said The will of heaven be done, and the king's pleasure By me obey'd. BRAN. Here is a warrant from 6 The king, to attach lord Montacute; and the bodies 5 I am sorry 6 To see you ta'en from liberty, to look on The business present:] I am sorry that I am obliged to be present and an eye-witness of your loss of liberty. JOHNSON. lord Montacute;] This was Henry Pole, grandson to George Duke of Clarence, and eldest brother to Cardinal Pole. He had married the Lord Abergavenny's daughter. He was restored to favour at this juncture, but was afterwards executed for another treason in this reign. REED. 7 John de la Court,] The name of this monk of the Chartreux was John de la Car, alias de la Court. See Holinshed, p. 863. STEEVENS. One Gilbert Peck, his chancellor,] The old copies have it-his counsellor; but I, from the authorities of Hall and Holinshed, changed it to chancellor. And our poet himself, in the beginning of the second Act, vouches for this correction: BUCK. So, so; These are the limbs of the plot: No more, I hope. BUCK. BRAN. He. BUCK. My surveyor is false; the o'er-great car dinal Hath show'd him gold: my life is spann'd already:' I am the shadow of poor Buckingham; 2 Whose figure even this instant cloud puts on, "At which, appear'd against him his surveyor, I believe [in the former instance] the author wrote-And Gilbert &c. MALONE. 9 Nicholas Hopkins?] The old copy has-Michael Hopkins. Mr. Theobald made the emendation, conformably to the Chronicle: "Nicholas Hopkins, a monk of an house of the Chartreux order, beside Bristow, called Henton." In the MS. Nich. only was probably set down, and mistaken for Mich. MALONE. 1 my life is spann'd already :] To span is to gripe, or inclose in the hand; to span is also to measure by the palm and fingers. The meaning, therefore, may either be, that hold is taken of my life, my life is in the gripe of my enemies; or, that time is measured, the length of my life is now determined. my JOHNSON. Man's life, in scripture, is said to be but a span long. Probably, therefore, it means, when 'tis spann'd 'tis ended. REED. I am the shadow of poor Buckingham;] So, in the old play of King Leir, 1605: "And think me but the shadow of myself." I am the shadow of poor Buckingham; STEEVENS. n.] These lines have passed all the editors. Does the reader understand them? By me they |