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Hath a distracted and moft wretched being,
Worfe than the worst, content.*

Thou should'st defire to die, being miferable.

3

TIM. Not by his breath, that is more miferable. Thou art a flave, whom Fortune's tender arm With favour never clafp'd; but bred a dog. 5

4

Worfe than the worst, content. ] Beft ftates contentlefs have a wretched being, a being worse than that of the worst ftates that are content. JOHNSON.

3

by his breath,]

his direction. JOHNSON.

It means, I believe, by his counsel, by

By his breath, I believe, is meant his fentence. To breathe is as licentiously used by Shakspeare in the following inftance from Hamlet:

"Having ever feen, in the prenominate crimes,
"The youth you breathe of guilty. STEVENS.

By his breath means in our author's language, by his voice or perch, and fo in fact by his fentence. Shakspeare frequently ules the word in this fenfe. It has been twice fo ufed in this play, See p. 102, n. 5. MALONE.

4 Thou art a flave, whom Fortune's tender arm

With favour never clafp'd;] In a Collection of Sonnets entitled Chloris, or the Complaint of the paffionate defpifed Shepheard, by William Smith, 1596, a fimilar image is found:

46

Doth any live that ever had fuch hap,
"That all their actions are of none effect!
"Whom Fortune never dandled in her lap,

But as an abject ftill doth me reject.

"

MALONE.

but bred a dog.] Alluding to the word Cynick, of which fea Apemantus was. WARBURTON.

For the etymology of Cynick our author was not obliged to have recourse to the Greek language. The di&ionaries of his time furnished him with it. See Cawdrey's Didionary of hard English words, octavo, 1604: "CYNICAL, Doggish, froward." Again, in Bullokar's English Expofitor, 1616: "CYNICAL, Doggish, or currish. There was in Greece an old fect of philofophers fo called, because they did ever fharply barke at men's vices," &c. After all, however, I believe Shakspeare only meant, thou wert born in a low ftate, and used from thy infancy to hardfhips. MALONE.

Hadft thou, like us, from our first swath,' proceeded The fweet degrees that this brief world affords

8

Had thou, like us, ] There is in this speech a fullen haughti. nefs, and malignant dignity, fuitable at once to the lord and the man hater. The impatience with which he bears to have his luxury reproached by one that never had luxury within his reach, is natural and graceful.

There is in a letter, written by the Earl of Effex, juft before his execution, to another nobleman, a paffage fomewhat refembling this, with which, I believe every reader will be pleafed, though it is fo ferious and folemn that it can fcarcely be inferted without irreverence:

now

"God grant your lordship may quickly feel the comfort enjoy' in my unfeigned converfion, but that you may never feel the torments I have fuffered for my long delaying it. I had none but deceivers to call upon me, to whom I faid, if my ambition could have entered into their narrow breafts, they would not have been fo humble; or if my delights had been once tafled by them, they would not have been fo precife. But your lord/hip hath one to call upon you, that knoweth what it is you now enjoy; and what the greatest fruit and end is of all contentment that this world can afford. Think, therefore, dear earl, that I have ftaked and buoyed all the ways of pleasure unto you, and left them as fea-marks for you to keep the channel of religious virtue. For fhut your eyes never fo long, they must be open at the laft, and then you must say with me, there is no peace to the ungodly." JOHNSON.

A fimilar thought occurs in a MS. metrical tranflation of an ancient French romance, preferved in the Library of King's College, Cambridge. [See note on Antony and Cleopatra, A& IV. fc. x: ::] For therefore of hardneffe hadeft thou never;

"But were brought forth in blisse, as swich a burde ought, "Wyth alle maner gode metes, and to miffe them now

"It were a botles bale," &c. p. 26, b. STEEVENS.

༡ firft (wath,} From infancy.

new-born child. JOHNSON.

So, in Heywood's Golden Age, 1611:

Swath is the drefs of a

"No more their cradles fhall be made their tombs,
"Nor their foft Swaths become their winding-fheets,"

The Sweet degrees-]

STEEVENS,

Thus the folio. The modern editors

have, without authority, read-Through &c. but this negled of the prepofition was common to many other writers of the age of Shakspeare. STEEVENS.

To fuch as may the paffive drugs of it

Freely command, thou would't have plung'd thy

felf

In general riot; melted down thy youth
In different beds of luft; and never learn'd
The icy precepts of refpect, but follow'd
The fugar'd game before thee. But myself,3

9 -

Rowe.

2

command] Old copy-command'ft. MALONE.

Corrected by Mr.

precepts of refpe&,] Of obedience to laws. JOHNSON. Refpeft, I believe, means the qu'en dira-t-on ? the regard of Athens, that frong ft reftraint on licentioufnefs: the icy precepts, i. e. that cool hot blood; what Mr. Burke, in his admirable Reflections on the Revolution in France, has emphatically ftyled of the greateft controuling powers on earth, the fenfe of fame and eftimation." STEEVENS.

"one

Timon cannot mean by the word refpe&t, obedience to the laws, as Johnfou fuppofes; for a poor man is more likely to be impreffed with a reverence for the laws, than one in a flation of nobility and affluence. Refpert may poffibly mean, as Steevens supposes, a regard to the opinion of the world: but I think it has a more enlarged fignification, and implies a confideration of confequences, whatever they may be In this fenfe it is ufed by Hamlet:

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There's the respect

"That makes calamity of fo long life."

M. MASON.

"The icy precepts of refpe&" mean the cold admonitions of cautious prudence, that deliberately weighs the confequences of every So, in Troilus and Creffila:

action.

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Reafon and respect,

"Makes livers pale, and luftihood deje." Again, in our poet's Rape of Lucrece:

"Then, childith fear, avaunt! debating die!

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Respect and reason wait on wrinkled age? "Sad paufe and deep regard become the fage." Hence in King Richard III. the King says:

3

I will converfe with iron-witted fools,
And unrespective boys; none are for me,
"That look into me with confiderate eyes."

MALONE.

But myfelf, he connection here requires fome attention. But is here uled to denote oppofition; but what immediately precedes is not oppofed to that which follows. The adverfative particle refers to the two firft lines:

Who had the world as my confectionary;

The mouths, the tongues, the eyes, and hearts of

men

At duty, more than I could frame employment;
That numberless upon me ftuck, as leaves
Do on the oak, have with one winter's brush
Fell from their boughs, and left me open, bare
For every ftorm that blows;-I, to bear this,
That never knew but better, is fome burden:
Thy nature did commence in fufferance, time.
Hath made thee hard in't. Why fhould't thou
hate men?

They never flatter'd thee: What haft thou given?
If thou wilt curfe,-thy father, that poor rag,"

Thou art a flave, whom fortune's tender arm
With favour never clafp'd; but bred a dog.
But myself..

Who had the world as my confectionary; &c.

The intermediate lines are to be confidered as a parenthesis of paffion. JOHNSON.

4

than I could frame employment;] i. e. frame employment for. Shakspeare frequently writes thus. See Vol. XVI. p. 185, n. 2; and Vol. XVII. p. 340, n. 8. MALONE.

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Fell from their boughs, and left me open, bare &c.] So, in Maffinger's Maid of Honour :

O fummer friendship,

"Whose flatt'ring leaves that fhadow'd us in our

Profperity, with the leaft guft drop off

In the autumn of adverfity." STEEVENS.

Somewhat of the famè imagery is found in our author's 73d Sonnet:

6

1

"That time of year thou may'ft in me behold,
"When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang

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Upon those boughs which shake againft the cold,
"Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds fang."

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that poor rag, If we read-poor rogue, it will correfpond rather better to what follows. JOHNSON.

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In King Richard 111. Margaret calls Glofter rag of honour; in

Must be thy fubject; who in fpite, put stuff
To fome the beggar, and compounded thee
Poor rogue hereditary. Hence! be gone!-
If thou hadit not been born the worst of men,
Thou hadst been a knave, and flatterer."

APEM.

Art thou proud yet?

TIM. Ay, that I am not thee.

APEM.

(

No prodigal.

TIM.

I, that I was

I, that I am one now:

Were all the wealth I have, fhut up in thee,

I'd give thee leave to hang it.

Get thee gone.

That the whole life of Athens were in this!
Thus would I eat it.

[Eating a root.

the fame play, the overweening rags of France are mentioned
and John Florio speaks of a tara-rag. player." STEEVENS.
We now use the word ragamuffin in the fame fenfe.

M. MASON.

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if the

The term is yet ufed. The loweft of the people are yet denominated Tag, rag, &c. So, in Julius Cæfar: tag-rag people did not clap him and hifs him,-I am no true man."

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MALONE.

Thou had been a knave, and flatterer.] Dryden has quoted two verfes of Virgil to show how well he could have written fatires. Shakspeare has here given a specimen of the fame power by a line bitter beyond all bitterness, in which Timon tells Apemantus, that he had not virtue enough for the vices which he condemos.

Dr. Warburton explains worst by lowest, which fomewhat weakens the fenfe, and yet leaves it fufficiently vigorous.

I have heard Mr. Burke commend the fubtilty of difcrimination with which Shakspeare distinguishes the prefent charader of Timon from that of Apemantus, whom to vulgar eyes he would now refemble. JOHNSON.

Knave is here to be understood of a man who endeavours to recommend himself by a hypocritical appearance of attention, and fuperfluity of fawning officioufnefs; fuch a one as is called in King Lear, a finical fuperferviceable rogue.If he had had virtue enough to attain the profitable vices, he would have been profitably vicious.

STEEVENS.

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