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To fetch me trifles, and return again,

As from a voyage, rich with merchandize,
But fhe, being mortal, of that boy did die;
And, for her fake, I do rear up her boy;
And, for her fake, I will not part with him.
Ob. How long within this wood intend you stay?
Queen. Perchance, till after Thefeus' wedding-day.
If you will patiently dance in our round,
And see our moon-light revels, go with us;
If not, fhun me, and I will spare your haunts.
Ob. Give me that boy, and I will go with thee.
Queen. Not for thy fairy kingdom. Fairies, away:
We shall chide down-right, if I longer stay.

[Exeunt Queen, and her train, Ob. Well, go thy way: thou shalt not from this. grove,

'Till I torment thee for this injury.

My gentle Puck, come hither; thou remember'ft 7

Since

rite might, without much licentioufnefs of language, be faid to follow a fhip that failed in the direction of the coaft; I think there is no fufficient reafon for adopting it. The coinage of new words is a violent remedy, not to be ufed but in the last neceffity. JOHNSON.

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-thou remember'ft

Since once 1 fat upon a promontory,

And heard a mermaid on a dolphin's back,
Uttering fuch dul.et and harmonious breath,
That the rude fea grew civil at her fong;
And certain ftars fhot madly from their Spheres
To bear the fea-maid's mufick]

The first thing obfervable on these words is, that this action of the
mermaid is laid in the fame time and place with Cupid's attack
upon the vestal. By the vestal every one knows is meant queen
Elizabeth. It is very natural and reasonable then to think that
the mermaid ftands for fome eminent perfonage of her time. And
if fo, the allegorical covering, in which there is a mixture of fa-
tire and panegyric, will lead us to conclude, that this person was
one of whom it had been inconvenient for the author to speak
openly, either in praise or difpraife. All this agrees with Mary
queen of Scots, and with no other. Q. Elizabeth could not bear
VOL. III.
D

Since once I fat upon a promontory,

And heard a mermaid, on a dolphin's back,
Uttering fuch dulcet and harmonious breath,
That the rude fea grew civil at her fong;
And certain ftars fhot madly from their fpheres,
To hear the fea-maid's mufick.

Puck.

to hear her commended; and her fucceffor would not forgive her fatyrift. But the poet has fo well marked out every distinguished circumftance of her life and character in this beautiful allegory, as will leave no room to doubt about his fecret meaning. She is called a mermaid, 1. to denote her reign over a kingdom fituate in the fea, and 2. her beauty, and intemperate luft,

-Ut turpiter atrum

Definat in pifcem mulier formofa fupernè.

for as Elizabeth for her chastity is called a veftal, this unfortunate lady on a contrary account is called a mermaid. 3. An ancient ftory may be supposed to be here alluded to. The emperor Julian tells us, Epiftle 41. that the Sirens (which, with all the modern poets, are mermaids) contended for precedency with the Mufes, who overcoming them took away their wings. The quarrels between Mary and Elizabeth had the fame caufe, and the fame iffue.

en a delphin's back,] This evidently marks out that diftinguishing circumitance of Mary's fortune, her marriage with. the dauphin of France, fon of Henry II.

Uttering fucb dulcet and harmonious breath,] This alludes to her great abilities of genius and learning, which rendered her the most accomplished princefs of her age. The French writers tell us, that, while fhe was in that court, fhe pronounced a Latin oration in the great hall of the Louvre, with fo much grace and eloquence, as filled the whole court with admiration.

That the rude fa grew civil at her fong ;] By the rude fea is meant Scotland encircled with the ocean; which rofe up in arms against the regent, while the was in France. But her return home prefently quieted thofe diforders: and had not her ftrange ill conduct afterwards more violently inflamed them, fhe might have paffed her whole life in peace. There is the greater juttnefs and beauty in this image, as the vulgar opinion is, that the mermaid always fings in ftorms.

And certain fars fhot madly from their Spheres

To bear the fea-maid's mufick.]

Thus concludes the defcription, with that remarkable circumstance of this unhappy lady's fate, the deftruction the brought upon seve

ral

Puck. I remember.

Ob. That very time I faw, (but thou could'ft not) Flying between the cold moon and the earth, Cupid all-arm'd: a certain aim he took,

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of the English nobility, whom the drew in to fupport her caufe. This, in the boldeft expreffion of the fublime, the poet images by certain fars fhooting madly from their fpheres: By which he meant the earls of Northumberland and Weftmorland, who fell in her quarrel; and principally the great duke of Norfolk, whofe projected marriage with her was attended with fuch fatal confequences. Here again the reader may obferve a peculiar juftnefs in the imagery. The vulgar opinion being that the mermaid allured. men to deftruction by her fongs. To which opinion Shakespeare alludes in his Comedy of Errors,

O train me not, fweet mermaid, with thy note,
To drown me in thy fifter's flood of tears.

On the whole, it is the nobleft and juftest allegory.that was ever written. The laying it in fairy land, and out of nature, is in the character of the fpeaker. And on thefe occafions Shakespeare always excels himself. He is borne away by the magic of his enthusiasm, and hurries his reader aloug with him into thefe ancient regions of poetry, by that power of verfe, which we may well fancy to be like what,

-Olim Fauni Valefque cansbant. WARBURTON.

* Cupid all-armed:] Surely, this prefents us with a very unclaffical image. Where do we read or fee, in ancient books, or monuments, Cupid armed more than with his bow and arrow; and with these we for ever fee him armed. And thefe are all the arms he had occafion for in this prefent action; a more illuftrious one than any, his friends, the clafficks, ever brought him upon. The change I make is fo fmall, but the beauty of the thought fo great, which this alteration carries with it, that, I think, we are not to hefitate upon it. For what an addition is this to the compliment made upon this virgin queen's celibacy, that it alarmed, the power of love? as if his empire was in danger, when this imperial vtress had declared herself for a fingle life: fo powerful would her great example be in the world.-Queen Elizabeth could not but be pleased with our author's addrefs upon this head. WARBURTON.

All-armed, does not fignify dressed in panoply, but only enforces the word armed, as we might fay all-booted. I am afraid that the general fenfe of alarmed, by which it is used for put into fear or care by whatever caufe, is later than our authour. JOHNSON.

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At a fair veftal, throned by the weft,

And loos'd his love-fhaft fmartly from his bow,
As it should pierce a hundred thousand hearts:
But I might fee young Cupid's fiery shaft
Quench'd in the chafte beams of the watery moon,
And the imperial votrefs paffed on,

In maiden meditation, fancy-free.

Yet mark'd I where the bolt of Cupid fell,
It fell upon a little western flower;

Before, milk-white; now purple with love's wound,
And maidens call it, love in idleness."

Fetch me that flower; the herb I fhew'd thee once;
The juice of it, on fleeping eye-lids laid,
Will make or man, or woman, madly doat
Upon the next live creature that it fees.
Fetch me this herb; and be thou here again,
Ere the leviathan can fwim a league.

Puck. I'll put a girdle round about the earth
In forty minutes.

Ob. Having once this juice,

[Exit.

And maidens call it love in idlness.] This is as fine a metamorphofis as any in Ovid: With a much better moral, intimating that irregular love has only power when people are idle, or not well employed. WARBURTON.

I believe the fingular beauty of this metamorphofis to have been quite accidental, as the poet is of another opinion, in the Taming the Shrew, A&I. Sc. 4.

But fee, while idly I ftood looking on,
I found th' effect of love in idleness;
And now in plainness I confess to thee,
Tranio, I burn, Ipine, I perish, Tranio,
If I atchieve not this young modeft girl.

And Lucentio's was furely a regular and honeft paffion. It is fcarce
neceffary to mention that love in idleness is a flower. Taylor, the
water poet, quibbling on the names of plants, mentions it as
follows:

"When paffions are let loose without a bridle,
"Then precious time is turn'd to love in idle."

STEEVENS.

I'll watch Titania when fhe is alleep,

And drop the liquor of it in her eyes:
The next thing then the waking looks upon,
(Be it on lion, bear, or wolf, or bull,
On meddling monkey, or on busy ape)
She shall purfue it with the foul of love:
Andere I take this charin off from her fight,
(As I can take it with another herb)
I'll make her render up her page to me.
But who comes here? I am invifible;'
And I will over-hear their conference.

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Enter Demetrius, Helena following him.
Dem. I love thee not, therefore pursue me not.
Where is Lyfander, and fair Hermia?
The one I'll flay; the other flayeth me."
Thou told'ft me, they were ftoln into this wood,
And here am I, and wode within this wood; '

Because

-1 am invifible.] I thought proper here to observe, that, as Oberon and Puck his attendant, may be frequently obferved to speak, when there is no mention of their entering; they are defigned by the poet to be fuppofed on the stage during the greatest part of the remainder of the play; and to mix, as they pleafe, as fpirits, with the other actors; and embroil the plot, by their interpofition, without being feen, or heard, but when to their own purpose. THEOBALD.

The one I'll stay the other stayeth me. ] Thus it has been in all the editions hitherto: but Dr. Thirlby ingenioufly faw, it must be, as I have corrected in the text. THEOBALD.

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ing. POPE.

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-and wode,

-] Wood, or mad, wild, rav

We meet with the word in Chaucer, The Monke's Prologue, 184, "What, should he study, or make himself wood?"

Spenfer alfo ufes it, Æglogue III. March,

The elf was fo wanton, and fo wode.

"The name Woden," fays Verftegan in his Antiquites, "fignifies "fierce or furious, and in like fenfe we ftill retain it, faying, when "one is in a great rage, that he is wood, or taketh on, as if he

"were wood."

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