Will well become such sweet complaininggrievance. This, or else nothing, will inherit her. For this curiosity the reader is indebted to STAFFORD SMITH, Esq. of his Majesty's Chapel Royal. STEEVENS. 4 - will inherit her.] To inherit, is, by our author, sometimes used, as in this instance, for to obtain possession of, without any idea of acquiring by inheritance. So, in Titus Andronicus: " He that had wit, would think that I had none, "And never after to inherit it." This sense of the word was not wholly disused in the time of DUKE. This discipline shows thou hast been in love. THU. Andthyadvicethis night I'll putin practice: To sort some gentlemen well skill'd in musick: DUKE. About it, gentlemen. PRO. We'll wait upon your grace till after supper: And afterward determine our proceedings. DUKE. Even now about it; I will pardon you." [Exeunt. 6 1 OUT., Fellows, stand fast; I see a passenger. 2 OUT. If there be ten, shrink not, but down with 'em. Enter VALENTINE and SPEED. 3 OUT. Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about you; Milton, who in his Comus has-" disinherit Chaos," meaning only, dispossess it. STEEVENS. * To sort-] i. e. to choose out. So, in K. Richard III : " Yet I will sort a pitchy hour for thee." STEEVENS. I will pardon you.] I will excuse you from waiting. 6 JOHNSON. If not, we'll make you sit, and rifle you." VAL. My friends, 1 Our. That's not so, sir; we are your enemies. 2 OUT. Peace; we'll hear him. 3 OUT. Ay, by my beard, will we; For he's a proper man. 8 VAL. Then know, that I have little wealth to lose; A man I am, cross'd with adversity: My riches are these poor habiliments, Of which if you should here disfurnish me, 2 OUT. Whither travel you? VAL. To Verona. 1 OUT. Whence came you? VAL. From Milan. 3 Our. Have you long sojourn'd there? VAL. Some sixteen months; and longer might have staid, If crooked fortune had not thwarted me. 1 OUT. What, were you banish'd thence? * If not, we'll make you sit, and rifle you.] The old copy reads as I have printed the passage. Paltry as the opposition between stand and sit may be thought, it is Shakspeare's own. My predecessors read" we'll make you, sir," &c. STEEVENS. 8 Sir, is the corrupt reading of the third folio. MALONE. a proper man.] i. e. a well-looking man; he has the ap pearance of a gentleman. So, afterwards: "And partly, seeing you are beautified "With goodly shape." MALONE. Again, in Othello: "This Ludovico is a proper man." STEEVENS. VAL. I was. 2 OUT. For what offence? VAL. For that which now torments me to rehearse: I kill'd a man, whose death I much repent; 1 Our. Why ne'er repent it, if it were done so: But were you banish'd for so small a fault? VAL. I was, and held me glad of such a doom. 1 Our. Have you the tongues? VAL. My youthful travel therein made me happy; Or else I often had been miserable. 3 OUT. By the bare scalp of Robin Hood's fat friar, Robin Hood's fat friar, Robin Hood was captain of a 0 band of robbers, and was much inclined to rob churchmen. JOHNSON. So, in A mery Geste of Robin Hoode, &c. bl. l. no date: But by Robin Hood's fat friar, I believe, Shakspeare means Friar Tuck, who was confessor and companion to this noted out law. So, in one of the old songs of Robin Hood: "And of brave little John, "Of Friar Tuck and Will Scarlett, " Stokesly and Maid Marian." Again, in the 26th song of Drayton's Polyolbion : "Of Tuck the merry friar which many a sermon made, Again, in Skelton's Play of Magnificence, f. 5. 6: See figure III. in the plate at the end of the first part of King Henry IV. with Mr. Tollet's observations on it. STEEVENS. Dr. Johnson seems to have misunderstood this passage. The speaker does not swear by the scalp of some churchman who had This fellow were a king for our wild faction. 1 OUT. We'll have him: sirs, a word. SPEED. Master, be one of them; It is an honourable kind of thievery. VAL. Peace, villain! 2 OUT. Tell us this: Have you any thing to take to? VAL. Nothing, but my fortune. 3 OUT. Knowthen, that some of us are gentlemen, 1 Such as the fury of ungovern'd youth An heir, and near allied unto the duke." been plundered, but by the shaven crown of Robin Hood's chaplain." We will live and die together, (says a personage in Peele's Edward I. 1593,) like Robin Hood, little John, friar Tucke, and Maide Marian." MALONE. 1 - awful men:] Reverend, worshipful, such as magistrates, and other principal members of civil communities. JOHNSON. Awful is used by Shakspeare, in another place, in the sense of lawful. Second part of K. Henry IV. Act IV. sc. ii : "We come within our awful banks again." TYRWHITT. So, in King Henry V. 1600: - creatures that by awe ordain " An act of order to a peopled kingdom." MALONE.. I believe we should read-lawful men-i. e. legales homines. So, in The Newe Boke of Justices, 1560: "-commandinge him to the same to make an inquest and pannel of lawful men of his countie." For this remark I am indebted to Dr. Farmer. STEEVENS, Awful men means men well governed, observant of law and authority; full of, or subject to awe. In the same kind of sense as we use fearful. RITSON. 2 An heir, and near allied unto the duke.] All the impressions, from the first downwards, read--An heir and niece allied unto: the duke. But our poet would never have expressed himself so |