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COUNT. Yes, Helen, you might be my daughter

in-law;

God shield, you mean it not! daughter, and mother,
So strive upon your pulse: What, pale again?
My fear hath catch'd your fondness: Now I see
The mystery of your loneliness, and find
Your salt tears' head. Now to all sense 'tis gross,
You love my son; invention is asham'd,
Against the proclamation of thy passion,

for future happiness; I should be as content, and solicit it as much, as I pray for the bliss of heaven."

Can't no other,

MALONE.

But, I your daughter, he must be my brother?] The meaning is obscured by the elliptical diction. Can it be no other way, but if I be your daughter, he must be my brother? JOHNSON.

strive-] To strive is to contend. So, in Cymbeline : “That it did strive in workmanship and value."

Now I see

STEEVENS.

The mystery of your loneliness, and find
Your salt tears' head.] The old copy reads-loveliness.

STEEVENS.

The mystery of her loveliness is beyond my comprehension : the old Countess is saying nothing ironical, nothing taunting, or in reproach, that this word should find a place here; which it could not, unless sarcastically employed, and with some spleen. I dare warrant the poet meant his old lady should say no more than this: "I now find the mystery of your creeping into corners, and weeping, and pining in secret." For this reason I have amended the text, loneliness. The Steward, in the foregoing scene, where he gives the Countess intelligence of Helena's behaviour, says—

"Alone she was, and did communicate to herself, her own words to her own ears. THEOBALD.

The late Mr. Hall had corrected this, I believe, rightly,lowliness. TYRWHITT.

your

I think Theobald's correction as plausible. To choose solitude is a mark of love. STEEVens.

Your salt tears' head.] The source, the fountain of your tears, the cause of your grief. JOHNSON.

Tó say, thou dost not: therefore tell me true;
But tell me then, 'tis so:-for, look, thy cheeks
Confess it, one to the other; and thine eyes
See it so grossly shown in thy behaviours,
That in their kind they speak it: only sin
And hellish obstinacy tie thy tongue,

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That truth should be suspected: Speak, is't so?
If it be so, you have wound a goodly clue;
If it be not, forswear't: howe'er, I charge thee,
As heaven shall work in me for thine avail,
To tell me truly.

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HEL.

Do not you love him, madam?

COUNT. Go not about; my love hath in't a bond, Whereof the world takes note: come, come, dis

close

The state of your affection; for your passions
Have to the full appeach'd.

HEL.

Then, I confess, Here on my knee, before high heaven and you, That before you, and next unto high heaven, I love your son:My friends were poor, but honest; so's my love: Be not offended; for it hurts not him, That he is lov'd of me: I follow him not By any token of presumptuous suit; Nor would I have him, till I do deserve him; Yet never know how that desert should be.

—in their kind-] i. e. in their language, according to their nature. STEEVENS.

I know I love in vain, strive against hope;
Yet, in this captious and intenible sieve,"
I still pour in the waters of my love,
And lack not to lose still: thus, Indian-like,
Religious in mine error, I adore

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The sun, that looks
that looks upon his worshipper,
But knows of him no more. My dearest madam,
Let not your hate encounter with my love,
For loving where you do: but, if yourself,

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captious and intenible sieve,] The word captious I never found in this sense; yet I cannot tell what to substitute, unless carious for rotten, which yet is a word more likely to have been mistaken by the copiers than used by the author.

JOHNSON.

Dr. Farmer supposes captious to be a contraction of capacious. As violent ones are to be found among our ancient writers, and especially in Churchyard's Poems, with which Shakspeare was not unacquainted. STEEVENS.

By captious, I believe Shakspeare only meant recipient, capable of receiving what is put into it; and by intenible, incapable of holding or retaining it. How frequently he and the other writers of his age confounded the active and passive adjectives, has been already more than once observed.

The original copy reads-intemible. made in the second folio. MALONE.

The correction was

• And lack not to lose still:] Perhaps we should readAnd lack not to love still. TYRWHITT.

I believe lose is right. So afterwards, in this speech: 66 - whose state is such, that cannot choose "But lend and give, where she is sure to lose," Helena means, I think, to say that, like a person who pours water into a vessel full of holes, and still continues his employment, though he finds the water all lost, and the vessel empty, so, though she finds that the waters of her love are still lost, that her affection is thrown away on an object whom she thinks she never can deserve, she yet is not discouraged, but perseveres in her hopeless endeavour to accomplish her wishes. The poet evidently alludes to the trite story of the daughters of Danaus. MAlone.

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Whose aged honour cites a virtuous youth,"
Did ever, in so true a flame of liking,
Wish chastly, and love dearly, that your Dian
Was both herself and love; O then, give pity
To her, whose state is such, that cannot choose
But lend and give, where she is sure to lose;
That seeks not to find that her search implies,
But, riddle-like, lives sweetly where she dies.
COUNT. Had you not lately an intent, speak
truly,

To go to Paris?

HEL.

COUNT.

Madam, I had.

Wherefore? tell true." HEL. I will tell truth; by grace itself, I swear. You know, my father left me some prescriptions Of rare and prov'd effects, such as his reading, And manifest experience, had collected For general sovereignty; and that he will'd me In heedfullest reservation to bestow them,

* Whose aged honour cites a virtuous youth,] i. e. whose respectable conduct in age shows, or proves, that you were no less virtuous when young. As a fact is proved by citing witnesses, or examples from books, our author, with his usual licence, uses to cite, in the same sense of to prove. MALONE.

• Wish chastly, and love dearly, that your Dian

Was both herself and love;] i. e. Venus. Helena means to say " If ever you wished that the deity who presides over chastity, and the queen of amorous rites, were one and the same person; or, in other words, if ever you wished for the honest and lawful completion of your chaste desires." I believe, however, the words were accidentally transposed at the press, and would read

Love dearly, and wish chastly, that your Dian &c.

MALONE.

9 tell true.] This is an evident interpolation. It is needless, because it repeats what the Countess had already said : it is injurious, because it spoils the measure. STEEVENS.

As notes, whose faculties inclusive' were,
More than they were in note: amongst the rest,
There is a remedy, approv'd, set down,

To cure the desperate languishes, whereof
The king is render'd lost.

COUNT.

For Paris, was it? speak.

This was your motive

HEL. My lord your son made me to think of

this;

Else Paris, and the medicine, and the king,
Had, from the conversation of my thoughts,
Haply, been absent then.

COUNT.

But think you, Helen, If you should tender your supposed aid,

He would receive it? He and his physicians
Are of a mind; he, that they cannot help him,
They, that they cannot help: How shall they credit
A poor unlearned virgin, when the schools,
Embowell'd of their doctrine,' have left off
The danger to itself?

HEL.

There's something hints,

More than my father's skill, which was the greatest Of his profession, that his good receipt3

1 notes, whose faculties inclusive-] Receipts in which greater virtues were inclosed than appeared to observation.

JOHNSON.

• Embowell'd of their doctrine,] i. e. exhausted of their skill. So, in the old spurious play of K. John :

"Back war-men, back; embowel not the clime."

3 There's something hints

More than my father's skill,

STEEVENS.

-that his good receipt, &c.] The old copy readssomething in't. STEEVENS.

Here is an inference, [that] without any thing preceding, to which it refers, which makes the sentence vicious, and shows that we should read

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