"
_Hamlet>_ i. 3.
On l. 405. (G.):--
"Where death and danger _dog_ the heels of worth."
_All's Well that ends Well_, iii. 4.
On l. 421. (M.):--
"Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just:
And he but naked, though locked up in steel,
Whose conscience with injustice is corrupted."
2 _Henry IV._, iii. 2.
On l. 424. (G.):--
"And now he treads th' _infamous_ woods and downs."
Ph. Fletcher's _Eclog._, i. p. 4. ed. 1633.
On l. 494. (G.) The same sort of compliment occurs in Wither's
_Sheperd's Hunting_. (See _Gentleman's Mag._ for December 1800, p.
1151.)
"Thou wert wont to charm thy flocks;
And among the massy rocks
Hast so cheered me with thy song,
That I have forgot my wrong."
He adds:--
"Hath some churle done thee a spight?
Dost thou miss a lamb to-night?"
_Juvenilia_, p. 417. ed. 12mo. 1633.
On l. 535. (M.):--
"Not powerful Circe with her _Hecate rites_."
Ph. Fletcher's _Poetical Miscellanies_, p. 65. ed. 1633.
On l. 544. (D.):--
"The soft sweet moss shall be thy bed
With crawling woodbine overspread.
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