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"And now to show my rule and power at lardge,
"Attentivelie his letters patents heare:

"Phallax, reade out my Soveraines chardge. Phal. "As you commaunde I wyll: give heedeful eare. Phallax readeth the Kinges Letters Pattents, which must be fayre written in parchment, with some great counterfeat zeale.

Pro." Loe, here you see what is our Soveraignes wyl, "Loe, heare his wish, that right, not might, beare swaye: "Loe, heare his care, to weede from good the yll, "To scoorge the wights, good lawes that disobay. "Such zeale he beares, unto the common weale, "(How so he byds, the ignoraunt to save)

"As he commaundes, the lewde doo rigor feele, &c.
&c. &c.

Pro." Both swoorde and keies, unto my princes use,
"I do receyve, and gladlie take my chardge.
"It resteth now, for to reforme abuse,

"We poynt a tyme of councell more at lardge,
"To treate of which, a whyle we wyll depart.
Al. speake. "To worke your wyll, we yeelde a willing hart.

Exeunt."

The reader will find the argument of G. Whetstone's Promos and Cassandra, at the end of this play. It is too bulky to be inserted here. See likewise the piece itself among Six old Plays on which Shakspeare founded, &c. published by S. Leacroft, Charing Cross. STEEVENS.

Measure for Measure was, I believe, written in 1603. See An Attempt to ascertain the Order of Shakspeare's Plays, Vol. II. MALONE.

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Vincentio, duke of Vienna.

Angelo, lord deputy in the duke's absence. Escalus, an ancient lord, joined with Angelo in the deputation.

Claudio, a young gentleman.

Lucio, a fantastick.

Two other like gentlemen.

*

Varrius, a gentleman, servant to the duke.

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Elbow, a simple constable.

Froth, a foolish gentleman.

Clown, servant to Mrs. Over-done.

Abhorson, an executioner.

Barnardine, a dissolute prisoner.

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Lords, Gentlemen, Guards, Officers, and other

Attendants.

SCENE, Vienna.

Varrius might be omitted, for he is only once spoken to,

and says nothing. JOHNSON.

6:

MEASURE FOR MEASURE.

ACT I. SCENE I.

An Apartment in the Duke's Palace.

Enter DUKE, ESCALUS, Lords, and Attendants.

DUKE. Escalus,—

ESCAL. My lord.

DUKE. Of government the properties to unfold, Would seem in me to affect speech and discourse; Since I am put to know,' that your own science, Exceeds, in that, the lists of all advice

2

1 Since I am put to know,] may mean, I am compelled to acknowledge.

So, in King Henry VI. P. II. sc. i:

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had I first been put to speak my mind." Again, in Drayton's Legend of Pierce Gaveston: "My limbs were put to travel day and night.”

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Again, in Hamlet":

STEEVENS.

"The ocean, over-peering of his list," STEEVENS.

My strength can give you: Then no more remains But that to your sufficiency, as your worth is able, And let them work. The nature of our people,

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3

Then no more remains,

But that to your sufficiency, as your worth is able,

And let them work.] To the integrity of this reading Mr. Theobald objects, and says, What was Escalus to put to his sufficiency? why, his science: But his science and sufficiency were but one and the same thing. On what then does the relative them depend? He will have it, therefore, that a line has been accidentally dropped, which he attempts to restore thus:

But that to your sufficiency you add

Due diligence, as your worth is able, &c.

Nodum in scirpo quærit. And all for want of knowing, that by sufficiency is meant authority, the power delegated by the Duke to Escalus. The plain meaning of the word being this: Put your skill in governing (says the Duke) to the power which I give you to exercise it, and let them work together.

WARBURTON.

Sir Thomas Hanmer having caught from Mr. Theobald a hint that a line was lost, endeavours to supply it thus:

Then no more remains,

But that to your sufficiency you join

A will to serve us, as your worth is able.

He has, by this bold conjecture, undoubtedly obtained a meaning, but, perhaps, not even in his own opinion, the meaning of Shakspeare.

That the passage is more or less corrupt, I believe every reader will agree with the editors. I am not convinced that a line is lost, as Mr. Theobald conjectures, nor that the change of but to put, which Dr. Warburton has admitted after some other editor, [Rowe,] will amend the fault. There was probably some original obscurity in the expression, which gave occasion to mistake in repetition or transcription. I therefore suspect that the author wrote thus:

Then no more remains,

sufficiencies your worth is abled,

But that to your
And let them work.

Then nothing remains more than to tell you, that your virtue is now invested with power equal to your knowledge and wisdom. Let therefore your knowledge and your virtue now work together. It may easily be conceived how sufficiencies was, by an

Our city's institutions, and the terms1

inarticulate speaker, or inattentive hearer, confounded with sufficiency as, and how abled, a word very unusual, was changed into able. For abled, however, an authority is not wanting. Lear uses it in the same sense, or nearly the same, with the Duke. As for sufficiencies, D. Hamilton, in his dying speech, prays that Charles II. may exceed both the virtues and sufficiencies of his father. JOHNSON.

·Then no more remains,

But that sufficiency, as worth is able,

And let them work.] Then no more remains to say, but that your political skill is on a par with your private integrity, and let these joint qualifications exert themselves in the public service.

But that sufficiency to your worth is abled, i. e. a power equal to your deserts.

The uncommon redundancy, as well as obscurity, of this verse, may be considered as evidence of its corruption. Take. away the second and third words, and the sense joins well enough with what went before. Then (says the Duke) no more remains to say,

But your sufficiency as your worth is able,

And let them work.

i. e. Your skill in government is, in ability to serve me, equal to the integrity of your heart, and let them co-operate in your future ministry.

The versification requires that either something should be added, or something retrenched. The latter is the easier, as well as the safer task. I join in the belief, however, that a line is lost; and whoever is acquainted with the inaccuracy of the folio, (for of this play there is no other old edition,) will find my opinion justified. STEEVENS.

Some words seem to be lost here, the sense of which, perhaps, may be thus supplied:

Then no more remains,

But that to your sufficiency you put

A zeal as willing as your worth is able,

And let them work. TYRWHITT.

A phrase similar to that which Mr. Tyrwhitt would supply, occurs in Chapman's version of the sixth Iliad:

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