Are like invulnerable:9 if you could hurt, Incens'd the feas and shores, yea, all the creatures, | Against your peace : Thee, ofthy son, Alonso, we were long indebted for our only English Dictionary. In a small book, entitled Humane indufiry: or, A History of most Manual Arts, printed in 1661, page 93, is the following pailage : « The woolbearing trees in Æthiopia, which Virgil speaks of, and the Eriophori Arbores in Theophrasius, are not such trees as have a certain wool or Dowl upon the outGde of them, as the small cotton; but short trees that bear a ball upon the top, pregnant with wool, which the Syrians call Cott, the Græcians Goffypium, the Italians Bombagio, and we Bombafe. 6 There is a certain shell-fish in the sea, called Pinna, that bears a moffy DOWL, or wool, whereof cloth was fpun and made. -Again, page 95: “ Trichitis, or the hayric ftone, by some Greek authors, and Alumen plumaceum, or downy alum, by the Latinifts : this hair or Dowl is fpun into thread, and weaved into cloth." I have fince discovered the same word in The Ploughman's Tale, erroneously attributed to Chaucer; v. 3202 ; " And swore by cock' is herte and blode, " He would tere him every doule." STEEVENS. the elements “ Their swords by them they laid -- doth bleed, 9 They have bereft; and do pronounce by me, from (Which here, in this most desolate isle, else falls Upon your heads,) is nothing, but heart's forrow, And a clear life 2 ensuing. 3 He vanishes in thunder: then, to soft musick, enter the Shapes again, and dance with mops and mowes 4 and carry out the table. Pro. (Afide.) Bravely the figure of this harpy hast thou Perform'd, my Ariel ; a grace it had, devouring: Of my instruction haft thou nothing 'bated, In what thou hadft to say: so, with good life, 2 -clear life) Pure, blameless, innocent. JOHNSON. So, in limon: --roots you clear heavens. » STEEVENS. 3 – is nothing, but reart's sorrow, And a clear life ensuing.) The meaning, which is somewhat obscured by the expression, is, a miserable fate, which nothing but contrition and amendment of life can avert. MALONE, - with mops and mowes— So, in K. Lear : STEEVENS. The old copy, by a manifest error of the press, reads--with 110cks. So afterwards :--- Will be here with mop and mowe. » MALONE. To mock and to mowe, seem to have had a meaning somewhat fimilar ; i. e. to insult, by making mouths, or wry faces. STEEVENS. --with good life, ) With good life may mean, with exact presentation of their feveral characters, with obfervation strange of their particular and diftin& parts. So we lay, he acted to the life. Johnson. Thus in the 6th Canto of the Barons' Wars, by Drayton : - Done for the last with such exceeding life, As art therein with nature seem'd at strife. » Good life, however, in Twelfth Vight, seems to be used for innocent jollity, as we now lay a bon vivant: 1 Would you (says 4 66 6 And observation strange, my meaner ministers my high charms (Exit PROSPERO from above. Gon. I' the name of something holy, fir, why stand you In this llrange stare ? O, it is monstrous ! monstrous! ( the Clown) have a love song, or a song of good life", Sir Toby answers, « A love song, a love song ;». Ay, ay, (replies Sir Andrew) I care not for good life. It is plain, from the chara&er of the laft speaker, that he was meant to inistake the senfe in which good life is used by the Clown. It may therefore, in the present instance, mean, honest alacrity, or cheerfulness. Life seems to be used in the chorus to the fifth ac of K. Henry V. with some meaning like that wanted to explain the approbation of Prospero : in which cannot in their huge and proper life STEEVENS. 6 Tlcir several kinds have done : ) i. e. have discharged the fe: veral funcions allotted to their different natures. Thus in Antony and Cleopatra, Ad V. fc. ii, the Clown fays - - You must think this, look you, that the worm will do his kind. STEEVENS. bass my trespass.) The deep pipe toll it me in a rough bafs found. JOHNSON. 7 Therefore my son i’the ooze is bedded; and I'll feek him deeper than e'er plummet sounded, And with him there lie muddéd.? [Exit. SEB. But one fiend at a time, I'll fight their legions o’er. ANT: I'll be thy second. (Exeunt SEB. and Ant. Gon. All three of thein are desperate ; their great guilt, Like poison given to work a great time after, Now gins to bite the spirits :-I do beseech you That are of suppler joints, follow them swiftly, And hinder them from what this ecstacy' May now provoke them to. ADRI. Follow, I pray you. [Exeunt. So, in Spenser's Fairy Queen, B. II. c. 12: the rolling fea resounding soft • In his big base them filly answered." STEEVENS. 7 And with him there lie mudded. But one fiend | As these hemisichs, taken together, exceed the proportion of a verse, I cannot help regarding the words with him, and but, as playhouse interpolations. The Tempest was evidently one of the last works of Shakspeare ; and it is therefore natural to suppose the metre of it must have been exa& and regular. Dr. Farmer concurs with me in this supposition. STEEVENS. : Like poison given, &c.] The natives of Africa have been supposed to be possessed of the secret how to temper poisons with such art as not to operate till several years after they were administered. Their drugs were then as certain in their effe&, as fubtle in their preparation. So, in the celebrated libel called - Leicester's Commonwealth :" " I heard hiin once myselfe in publique ad at Oxford, and that in presence of my lord of Leicester, maintain that poyson might be fo tempered and given as it should not appear presently, and yet should kill the party afterwards at what time should be appointed." STEEVENS. - this ecitacy-- Ecstacy meant not anciently, as at present, rapturous pleasure, but alienation of mind, Mr. Locke has not inelegantly styled it dreaming with our eyes open. STEEVENS. VOL. IV. I 9 A C T IV. SCENE I. Before Profpero's cell. Enter PROSPERO, FERDINAND, and MIRANDA, Pro. If I have too austerely punish'd you, 2 - thread of mine own life, ) The old copy reads—thirds, The word thread was formerly so spelt, as appears from the fol. lowing passage : Long maist thou live, and when the fisters shall decrec - To cut in twaine the twisted third of life, 6. Then let him die, » &c. See comedy of Mucedorus, 1619, signat. C. 3. HAWKINS. A third of mine own life » is a fibre or a part of my own life, Prospero confiders himself as the stock or parent-tree, and his daughter as a fibre or portion of himself, and for whose benefit he himself lives. In this feuse the word is used in Markham's English Hufhandman, edit. 1635, p. 146: 6. Cut of all the inaine rootes, within half a foot of the tree, only the small thriddes or twist rootes you shall not cut at all.” Again, ibid. Every branch and third of the root." This is evidently the same word as thread, which is likewise spelt third by lord Bacon. Tollet. So, in Lingua, &c. 1607 i and I could furnish many more ine fances : 66 For as a subtle spider closely fitting " She feels it instantly. com-one of wordly shame's children, of his countenance, and THRIDE of his body. STEEVENS. Again, in Tancred and Gifmund, a tragedy, 1592, Tancred, Againit all law of kinde, to shred in twaine MALONE. 1 66 |