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LEAR.

Say, how is that? REG. I cannot think, my sister in the least Would fail her obligation: If, sir, perchance, She have restrain'd the riots of your followers, 'Tis on such ground, and to such wholesome end, As clears her from all blame.

LEAR. My curses on her!

REG.

O, sir, you are old; Nature in you stands on the very verge

Of her confine: you should be rul❜d, and led
By some discretion, that discerns your state
Better than you yourself: Therefore, I pray you,
That to our sister you do make return;

Say, you have wrong'd her, sir.

LEAR.

Again, in Macbeth:

Ask her forgiveness?

"Who cannot want the thought how monstrous
"It was for Malcolm and for Donalbain

"To kill the gracious Duncan ???

Here unquestionably for cannot the poet should have written See also Vol. XVII. p. 240, n. 6.

can.

If Lear is less knowing in the valuation of Goneril's desert, than she is in her scanting of her duty, then she knows better how to scant or be deficient in her duty, than he knows how to appreciate her desert. Will any one maintain, that Regan meant to express a hope that this would prove the case?

Shakspeare perplexed himself by placing the word less before know; for if he had written, " I have hope that you rather know how to make her desert less than it is, (to under-rate it in your estimation) than that she at all knows how to scant her duty," all would have been clear; but, by placing less before know, this meaning is destroyed.

Those who imagine that this passage is accurately expressed as it now stands, deceive themselves by this fallacy: in paraphrasing it, they always take the word less out of its place, and connect it, or some other synonymous word, with the word desert. MALone.

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* Say, &c.] This, as well as the following speech, is omitted in the quartos. STEEVENS.

Do you but mark how this becomes the house:" Dear daughter, I confess that I am old;

Age is unnecessary 7 on my knees I beg, [Kneeling. That you'll vouchsafe me raiment, bed, and food.

6 Do you but mark how this becomes the house:] The order

of families, duties of relation. WARBURTON.

In The Tempest we have again nearly the same sentiment: "But Ó how oddly will it sound that I

"Must ask my child forgiveness?" MALONE.

the re

Dr. Warburton's explanation may be supported by the following passage in Milton on Divorce, B. II. ch. xii: “ straint whereof, who is not too thick-sighted, may see how hurtful, how destructive, it is to the house, the church, and commonwealth!" TOLLET.

The old reading may likewise receive additional support from the following passage in The Blind Beggar of Alexandria, 1598: "Come up to supper; it will become the house wonderful well.'

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Mr. Tollet has since furnished me with the following extract from Sir Thomas Smith's Commonwealth of England, 4to. 1601, chap. II. which has much the same expression, and explains it. They two together [man and wife] ruleth the house. The house I call here, the man, the woman, their children, their servants, bond and free," &c. STEEVENS.

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Again, in Painter's Palace of Pleasure:— "The gentleman's wife one day could not refraine (beholding a stagges head set up in the gentleman's house) from breaking into a laughter before his face, saying how that head became the house very well.”

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HENDERSON,

Age is unnecessary:] i. e. Old age has few wants.

JOHNSON.

This usage of the word unnecessary is quite without example; and I believe my learned coadjutor has rather improved than explained the meaning of his author, who seems to have designed to say no more than that it seems unnecessary to children that the lives of their parents should be prolonged. Age is unnecessary, may mean, old people are useless. So, in The Old Law, by Massinger :

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your laws extend not to desert,

"But to unnecessary years; and, my lord,
"His are not such." STEEVENS.

Unnecessary in Lear's speech, I believe, means-in want of necessaries, unable to procure them. TYRWHITT.

REG. Good sir, no more; these are unsightly

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Most serpent-like, upon the very heart:-
All the stor❜d vengeances of heaven fall

On her ingrateful top! Strike her young bones,
You taking airs, with lameness!

CORN.

Fye, fye, fye! LEAR. Younimble lightnings, dart your blinding flames

Into her scornful eyes! Infect her beauty,
You fen-suck'd fogs, drawn by the powerful sun,
To fall and blast her pride!?

Look'd black upon me;] To look black, may easily be explain'd to look cloudy or gloomy. See Milton:

"So frown'd the mighty combatants, that hell
"Grew darker at their frown." JOHNSON.

So, Holinshed, Vol. III. p. 1157: 66 repined, and looked black." TOLLET.

9 To fall and blast her pride!] reads not so well, to fall and blister.

the bishops thereat

Thus the quarto: The folio
JOHNSON.

Fall is, I think, used here as an active verb, signifying to humble or pull down. Ye fen-suck'd fogs, drawn from the earth by the powerful action of the sun, infect her beauty, so as to fall and blast, i. e. humble and destroy, her pride. Shakspeare in other places uses fall in an active sense. So, in Othello:

"Each drop she falls will prove a crocodile." Again, in Troilus and Cressida:

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make him fall

"His crest, that prouder than blue Iris bends.” In the old play of King Leir our poet found

"I ever thought that pride would have a fall."

MALONE.

REG.

O the blest gods!

1

So will you wish on me, when the rash mood's on.1 LEAR. No, Regan, thou shalt never have my

curse;

Thy tender-hefted nature2 shall not give
Thee o'er to harshness; her eyes are fierce, but thine
Do comfort, and not burn :3 'Tis not in thee

I see no occasion for supposing with Malone, that the word fall is to be considered in an active sense, as signifying to humble or pull down; it appears to me to be used in this passage in its common acceptation; and that the plain meaning is this, "You fen suck'd fogs, drawn up by the sun in order to fall down again and blast her pride." M. MASON.

I once proposed the same explanation to Dr. Johnson, but he would not receive it. STEEVENS.

1

when the rash mood's on.] Thus the folio. The quartos read only,when the rash mood-perhaps leaving the sentence purposely unfinished, as indeed I should wish it to be left, rather than countenance the admission of a line so inharmonious as that in the text. STEEVENS.

2

Thy tender-hefted nature-] Hefted seems to mean the same as heaved. Tender-hefted, i. e. whose bosom is agitated by tender passions. The formation of such a participle, I believe, cannot be grammatically accounted for. Shakspeare uses hefts for heavings in The Winter's Tale, Act II. Both the quartos however read, "tender-hested nature;" which may mean a nature which is governed by gentle dispositions. Hest is an old word signifying command. So, in The Wars of Cyrus, &c.

1594:

"Must yield to hest of others that be free."

Hefted is the reading of the folio. STEEVENS.

Do comfort, and not burn:] The same thought, but more expanded, had already occurred in Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella:

"She comes with light and warmth, which like Aurora

prove

"Of gentle force, so that mine eyes dare gladly play
"With such a rosie morne, whose beames, most freshly

gay,

"Scorch not, but onely doe darke chilling sprites remove." STEEVENS.

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To grudge my pleasures, to cut off my train,
To bandy hasty words, to scant my sizes,
And, in conclusion, to oppose the bolt
Against my coming in: thou better know'st
The offices of nature, bond of childhood,
Effects of courtesy, dues of gratitude;
Thy half o'the kingdom hast thou not forgot,
Wherein I thee endow'd.

REG.

Good sir, to the purpose.

[Trumpets within.

What trumpet's that?

LEAR. Who put my man i' the stocks?

CORN.

Enter Steward.

REG. I know't, my sister's: this approves her letter,

That she would soon be here.-Is your lady come?

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-to scant my sizes,] To contract my allowances or proportions settled. JOHNSON.

A sizer is one of the lowest rank of students at Cambridge, and lives on a stated allowance.

Sizes are certain portions of bread, beer, or other victuals, which in publick societies are set down to the account of particular persons: a word still used in colleges. So, in The Return from Parnassus:

"You are one of the devil's fellow-commoners; one that sizeth the devil's butteries."

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Fidlers, set it on my head; I use to size my musick, or go on the score for it." Return from Parnassus.

Size sometimes means company. So, in Cinthia's Revenge, 1613:

“He now attended with a barbal size

"Of sober statesmen," &c.

I suppose a barbal size is a bearded company. STEEvens.
See a size in Minsheu's Dictionary. TOLLET.

5 Corn. What trumpet's that?

Reg. I know't, my sister's:] Thus, in Othello:
"The Moor,-I know his trumpet."

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