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In Hamlet, see vol. vii. p. 216, Mr. Malone states, that the quarto, 1604, reads,

"The safety and health of this whole state;"

where he supposes that the before health was inadvertently omitted. We may doubt, upon Spenser's authority, whether there was any omission. One class of verses have hitherto been considered as defective, but erroneously in my opinion. In the first scene of Macbeth this passage occurs. See vol. xi. p. 12: "1 Witch. Where the place?

"2 Witch.

Upon the heath.

"3 Witch. There to meet with Macbeth."

The second of these having been considered imperfect, the reader will see, at the page referred to, the remedies which have been proposed. In Love's Labour's Lost, vol. iv. p. 371, I have mistakingly printed

"She for whom even Jove would swear
"Juno but an Ethiop were."

In the old copies even is omitted, and thus we find it also in the Passionate Pilgrim, see vol. x; and in England's Helicon. I am satisfied that our ancestors had a measure consisting of only six syllables, and that both the lines quoted were perfectly correct as they originally stood. I have come to this conclusion, not only because other instances are to be found in Shakspeare's plays, but in many of his contemporaries. Thus, in A Midsummer Night's Dream:

Again:

"Puck. Over hill, over dale,
"Thorough bush, thorough briar ;
"Over park, over pale,

"Thorough flood, thorough fire,
"I do wander every where

"Swifter than the moon's sphere."

Vol. v. p. 199.

"Up and down, up and down,
"I will lead them up and down."

Ibid. p. 283.

So also in the Epilogue to the Tempest:

"Now my charms are all o'erthrown,
"And what strength I have's my own;
"Which is most faint: now 'tis true
"I must be here confined by you.

*

*

"Gentle breath of yours my sails
"Must fill, or else my project fails,
"Which was to please: Now I want
"Spirits to enforce, art to enchant."

Vol. xv. p. 182.

It is true that there are seven syllables in the lines which I have here marked by italicks; but a syllable may be either added or not at the beginning of such verses, as the common measure may consist of seven syllables or eight. If we had merely these several instances to produce from Shakspeare, we could scarcely consider them all as accidental corruptions; yet it might still be considered as a practice peculiar to himself. I have now to show that the same may be found in his contemporaries. The following, among others, occur in Fletcher's Faithful Shepherdess:

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"Let her fly, let her scape.
"Give again her own shape."

Let us now turn to Ben Jonson:

"Look, see!-beshrew this tree-
"She can start our Franklins daughters
"In her sleep with shrieks and laughters,
"And on sweet St. Anne's night
"Feed them with a promised sight-
"Mab. Fairies, pinch him black and blue,
"Now you have him, make him rue.
"Satyr. O hold, Mab I sue.

"But see, the hobby-horse is forgot,
"Fool, it must be your lot
"To supply his want with faces
"And some other buffoon graces
"You know how: piper play."

Ibid.

Entertainment at Althorpe.

As the seven or eight syllable measure was divided into two short ones,

"With ravished ears

"The Monarch hears;

so, also, out of this were formed two still shorter:

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Various lines in Shakspeare, and the poets of his time, which sound harshly to a mere modern ear, are brought back to regularity by resorting to a different accentutation, such as, détestable for detéstable; aspéct for aspect; and many other instances which are adverted to in the notes. Yet still the number is not

inconsiderable, which by no process whatever can be rendered harmonious. The defence that must be set up for Shakspeare is, that his contemporaries were equally faulty in this respect. It may be observed, that this defect is scarcely ever found but in the heroick metre of ten syllables. Those who wrote smoothly in a shorter measure, fall into the most hobbling versification when they attempt the heroick couplet. The smaller pieces, for instance, of Nicholas Breton, have a very pleasing flow, of which the well-known ballad,

"On a hill there grows a flower,"

may be cited as an instance. But the same writer,
in his
"Sir Philip Sidney's Ourania," has exhibited
the most deplorable specimens of doggrel that the
language can supply. The commencement of his
Shepherd's song will show in what measure he in-
tended to compose:

"Before this world, quoth he, was set in frame,
"Or any thing had essence forme or name."

Yet we soon after find him hobbling in this manner:

"Yet were no angels as then created,

"Nor angels offices destinated;

"Nor could their attendance do him pleasure,

"In whom consisted all blessed treasure:"

and the greater part of his poem is much in the same strain. But much higher names than Breton are liable to a similar reproach. Thus, even Spenser:

Again:

"Faire seemely pleasaunce each to other makes
"With goodly purposes there as they sit."
Fairy Queen, b. i. c. ii. st. 30.

"Vile caytive vassall of dread and dispayre."

B. ii. c. iii. st. 7.

Thus also Massinger :

Again:

"Heaven forbid

"I should divert him from his holy purpose
"To worldly cares again! I rather will
"Sustain the burthen, and with the converted
"Feast the converters."

City Madam, Act III. Sc. III.

"I never saw him

"Since he swoon'd in the presence when my father
"Gave audience to the ambassador."

Again:

Bashful Lover, Act II. Sc. II.

"His desires were that

"Assurance for his safety might be granted
"To his royal Master, who came as a friend,
"And not as an enemy, to offer to you
"Conditions of peace."

Ibid. Act IV. Sc. III.

I could multiply quotations on this subject; but these will suffice to show, that when Shakspeare fell into these irregularities, he was countenanced by the practice of his contemporaries; that the attempts at emendation to get rid of those are wholly unnecessary; and that there was not the slightest foundation for the sneers of Messrs. Ritson and George Hardinge, when Mr. Malone asserted that such verses were tolerated in our poet's time. The ten syllable heroick line is, perhaps, the most difficult species of verse in our language, as it is in truth the longest; the Alexandrine and that of fourteen syllables being, in fact, two short ones joined together. If a wrong accent is placed on any one word, the line loses its character, which is essentially iambick, with the occasional mixture of other feet for the sake of variety, and falls into an anapestick cadence. Take, for instance, the first line of Pope's Essay on Man :

"Awake my St. John, leave all meaner things."

Pronounce the name of that infidel nobleman as if he had been a saint; or for "leave all," read " desert;"

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