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at home, that our armies join not in a hot day! for, by the Lord, I take but two fhirts out with me, and I mean not to sweat extraordinarily if it be a hot day, an I brandish any thing but my bottle, I would I might never fpit white again.5 There is not a dangerous action can peep out his head, but I am thruft upon it: Well, I cannot laft ever: But it was always" yet the trick of our English nation, if they have a good thing, to make it too common. If you will needs fay, I am an old man, you should give me reft. I would to God, my name were not fo terrible to the enemy as it is. I were better to be eaten to death with ruft, than to be fcoured to nothing with perpetual motion.

CH. JUST. Well, be honest, be honeft; And God bless your expedition!

FAL. Will your lordship lend me a thousand pound, to furnish me forth?

CH. JUST. Not a penny, not a penny; you are too impatient to bear croffes. Fare you well: Commend me to my coufin Weftmoreland.

[Exeunt Chief Juftice and Attendant.

5 would I might never fpit white again.] i. e. May I never have my ftomach inflamed again with liquor; for, to pit white is the confequence of inward heat. So, in Mother Bombie, a comedy, 1594: "They have fod their livers in fack these forty years; that makes them fpit white broth as they do." Again, in The Virgin Martyr, by Maffinger:

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-I could not have Spit white for want of drink."

STEEVENS.

But it was always &c.] This fpeech, in the folio, concludes at—I cannot last ever. All the reft is restored from the quarto. A clear proof of the fuperior value of thofe editions, when compared with the publication of the players. STEEVENS. you are too impatient to bear croffes.] I believe a quibble was here intended. Falstaff had just asked his lordship to lend him a thousand pound, and he tells him in return that

7

FAL. If I do, fillip me with a three-man beetle.8 -A man can no more feparate age and covetuoufness, than he can part young limbs and lechery: but the gout galls the one, and the pox pinches the other; and fo both the degrees prevent my curfes.9 -Boy!

he is not to be entrusted with money. A crofs is a coin fo called, because stamped with a crofs. So, in As you like it:

"If I should bear you, I should bear no cross."

STEEVENS.

8 fillip me with a three-man beetle.] A beetle wielded by three men. POPE.

A diverfion is common with boys in Warwickshire and the. adjoining counties, on finding a toad, to lay a board about two or three feet long, at

right angles, over a stick about two or three inches diameter, as per sketch. Then, placing the toad

at A, the other end is ftruck by a bat or large stick, which throws the creature forty or fifty feet perpendicular from the earth, and its return in general kills it. This is called Filliping the Toad.-A three-man beetle is an implement used for driving piles; it is made of a log of wood about eighteen or twenty inches diameter, and fourteen or fifteen inches thick, with one short and two long handles, as per sketch. A man at each of the long handles manages the fall of the beetle, and a third man, by the fhort handle, affifts

in raifing it to ftrike the blow. Such an implement was, without doubt, very fuitable for filliping fo corpulent a being as Falstaff. With this happy illuftration, and the drawings annexed, I was favoured by Mr. Johnson, the architect. STEEVENS.

So, in A World of Wonders, A Mafs of Murthers, A Covie of Cofenages, &c. 1595, fign. F. “ -whilft Arthur Hall was weighing the plate, Bullock goes into the kitchen and fetcheth a heavie wafhing betle, wherewith he comming behinde Hall, ftrake him," &c. REED.

9

prevent my curses.] To prevent means, in this place, to anticipate. So, in the 119th Pfalm: "Mine eyes prevent the night watches." STEEVENS.

PAGE. Sir?

FAL. What money is in my purfe?
PAGE. Seven groats and two-pence.

FAL. I can get no remedy against this confumption of the purfe: borrowing only lingers and lingers it out, but the difeafe is incurable.-Go bear this letter to my lord of Lancafter; this to the prince; this to the earl of Weftmoreland; and this to old mistress Urfula, whom I have weekly fworn to marry fince I perceived the firft white hair on my chin: About it; you know where to find me. [Exit Page.] A pox of this gout! or, a gout of this pox! for the one, or the other, plays the rogue with my great toe. my great toe. It is no matter, if I do halt; I have the wars for my colour, and my penfion fhall feem the more reasonable: A good wit will make use of any thing; I will turn diseases to commodity.' [Exit.

SCENE III,

York. A Room in the Archbishop's Palace.

Enter the Archbishop of York, the Lords HASTINGS, MOWBRAY, and BARDOLPH.

ARCH. Thus have you heard our caufe, and known

our means;

And, my moft noble friends, I pray you all,
Speak plainly your opinions of our hopes :-
And firft, lord marshal, what fay you to it?

I 1- to commodity.] i. e. profit, felf-intereft. See Vol. X. p. 408, n. 8. STEEVENS.

MoWB. I well allow the occafion of our arms; But gladly would be better satisfied,

How, in our means, we fhould advance ourselves To look with forehead bold and big enough Upon the

power and puiffance of the king.

HAST. Our prefent mufters grow upon the file To five and twenty thousand men of choice; And our fupplies live largely in the hope Of great Northumberland, whofe bofom burns With an incensed fire of injuries.

BARD. The queftion then, lord Hastings, ftandeth thus ;

Whether our prefent five and twenty thousand
May hold up head without Northumberland.
HAST. With him, we may.

BARD.

Ay, marry, there's the point; But if without him we be thought too feeble,

My judgment is, we fhould not step too far 2
Till we had his affiftance by the hand:
For, in a theme fo bloody-fac'd as this,
Conjecture, expectation, and furmife
Of aids uncertain, should not be admitted.

ARCH. 'Tis very true, lord Bardolph; for, indeed,

It was young Hotfpur's cafe at Shrewsbury.

BARD. It was, my lord; who lin'd himself with hope,

Eating the air on promife of fupply,

Flattering himself with project of a power
Much smaller 3 than the smallest of his thoughts:
And fo, with great imagination,

2

-Step too far-] The four following lines were added in the second edition. JOHNSON.

3 Much Smaller-] i. e. which turned out to be much smaller.

MUSGRAVE.

Proper to madmen, led his powers to death,
And, winking, leap'd into deftruction.

HAST. But, by your leave, it never yet did hurt,
To lay down likelihoods, and forms of hope.
BARD. Yes, in this prefent quality of war;
Indeed the inftant action,+ (a caufe on foot,)

4 Yes, in this prefent quality of war; &c.] These first twenty lines were first inferted in the folio of 1623.

The first clause of this paffage is evidently corrupted. All the folio editions and Mr. Rowe's concur in the fame reading, which Mr. Pope altered thus:

Yes, if this prefent quality of war

Impede the infiant act.

This has been filently followed by Mr. Theobald, Sir Thomas Hanmer, and Dr. Warburton; but the corruption is certainly deeper, for, in the prefent reading, Bardolph makes the inconvenience of hope to be that it may caufe delay, when, indeed, the whole tenor of his argument is to recommend delay to the reft that are too forward. I know not what to propofe, and am afraid that fomething is omitted, and that the injury is irremediable. Yet, perhaps, the alteration requifite is no more than this:

Yes, in this prefent quality of war,
Indeed of inftant action.

It never, fays Haftings, did harm to lay down likelihoods of hope. Yes, fays Bardolph, it has done harm in this prefent quality of war, in a ftate of things fuch as is now before us, of war, indeed of inftant action. This is obfcure, but Mr. Pope's reading is ftill lefs reasonable. JOHNSON. I have adopted Dr. Johnfon's emendation, though I think we might read:

if this prefent quality of war

Impel the inftant action.

Haftings fays, it never yet did hurt to lay down likelihoods and forms of hope. Yes, fays Bardolph, it has in every cafe like ours, where an army inferior in number, and waiting for supplies, has, without that reinforcement, impelled, or haftily brought on, an immediate action. STEEVENS.

If we may be allowed to read-inflanc'd, the text may mean-Yes, it has done harm in every cafe like ours; indeed, it did harm in young Hotfpur's cafe at Shrewsbury, which the Archbishop of York has just inftanced or given as an example.

TOLLET.

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