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Thou out of heaven's benediction com'st
To the warm sun!

Approach, thou beacon to this under globe,
That by thy comfortable beams I may

Peruse this letter!-Nothing almost sees miracles",
But misery;-I know, 'tis from Cordelia ';

6

The saw alluded to, is in Heywood's Dialogues on Proverbs, book ii. chap. v. :

TYRWHITT.

"In your running from him to me, ye runne "Out of God's blessing into the warme sunne." Kent was not thinking of the king's being turned out of house and home to the open weather, a misery which he has not yet experienced, but of his being likely to receive a worse reception from Regan than that which he had already experienced from his elder daughter Goneril. Hanmer therefore certainly misunderstood the passage.

A quotation from Holinshed's Chronicle, may prove the best comment on it. "This Augustine after his arrival converted the Saxons indeed from Paganisme, but, as the proverb sayth, bringing them out of Goddes blessing into the warme sunne, he also embued them with no lesse hurtful superstition than they did know before."

See also Howell's Collection of English Proverbs, in his Dictionary, 1660: "He goes out of God's blessing to the warm sun, viz. from good to worse." MAlone.

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S Nothing almost sees miracles,] Thus the folio. The quartos read-Nothing almost sees my wrack. STEEVENS.

6 - I know, 'tis from Cordelia; &c.] This passage, which some of the editors have degraded as spurious to the margin, and others have silently altered, I have faithfully printed according to the quarto, from which the folio differs only in punctuation. The passage is very obscure, if not corrupt. Perhaps it may be read

thus:

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"Of

· Cordelia

-has been -informed

my obscured course, and shall find time"From this enormous state-seeking, to give

"Losses their remedies

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O Cordelia is informed of our affairs, and when the enormous care of seeking her fortune will allow her time, she will employ it in remedying losses. This is harsh; perhaps something better may be found. I have at least supplied the genuine reading of the old copies. Enormous is unwonted, out of rule, out of the ordinary course of things. JOHNSON.

So, Holinshed, p. 647: "The maior perceiving this enormous doing," &c. STEEVENS.

Who hath most fortunately been inform'd
Of my obscured course; and shall find time
From this enormous state, seeking to give
Losses their remedies All weary and o'er-
watch'd,

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From this enormous state,-seeking to give

Losses their remedies :] I confess I do not understand this

passage, unless it may be considered as divided parts of Cordelia's letter, which he is reading to himself by moonlight: it certainly conveys the sense of what she would have said. In reading a letter, it is natural enough to dwell on those circumstances in it that promise the change in our affairs which we most wish for ; and Kent having read Cordelia's assurances that she will find a time to free the injured from the enormous misrule of Regan, is willing to go to sleep with that pleasing reflection uppermost in his mind. But this is mere conjecture. STEEvens.

In the old copies these words are printed in the same character as the rest of the speech. I have adhered to them, not conceiving that they form any part of Cordelia's letter, or that any part of it is or can be read by Kent. He wishes for the rising of the sun, that he may read it. I suspect that two half lines have been lost between the words state and seeking. This enormous state means, I think, the confusion subsisting in the state, in consequence of the discord which had arisen between the Dukes of Albany and Cornwall; of which Kent hopes Cordelia will avail herself. He says, in a subsequent scene

66

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There is division,

Although as yet the face of it be cover'd

"With mutual cunning, 'twixt Albany and Cornwall."

In the modern editions, after the words under globe, the following direction has been inserted: "Looking up to the moon." Kent is surely here addressing, not the moon, but the sun, which he has mentioned in the preceding line, and for whose rising he is impatient, that he may read Cordelia's letter. He has just before said to Gloster, "Give you good morrow!" The comfortable beams of the moon, no poet, I believe, has mentioned. Those of the sun are again mentioned by Shakspeare in Timon of Athens:

"Thou sun, that comfort'st, burn!" MALONE.

Dr. Johnson's explanation of this passage cannot be right; for although in the old ballad from whence this play is supposed to be taken, Cordelia is forced to seek her fortune, in the play itself

Take vantage, heavy eyes, not to behold
This shameful lodging.

Fortune, good night; smile once more; turn thy [He sleeps.

wheel!

she is Queen of France; and has no fortune to seek; but it is more difficult to discover the real meaning of this speech, than to refute his conjecture. It seems to me, that the verb, shall find, is not governed by the word Cordelia, but by the pronoun I, in the beginning of the sentence; and that the words from this enormous state, do not refer to Cordelia, but to Kent himself, dressed like a clown, and condemned to the stocks,-an enormous state indeed for a man of his high rank.

The difficulty of this passage has arisen from a mistake in all the former editors, who have printed these three lines as if they were a quotation from Cordelia's letter, whereas they are in fact the words of Kent himself; let the reader consider them in that light, as part of Kent's own speech, the obscurity is at an end, and the meaning is clearly this: "I know that the letter is from Cordelia, (who hath been informed of my obscured course,) and shall gain time, by this strange disguise and situation, which I shall employ in seeking to remedy our present losses."

M. MASON. Notwithstanding the ingenuity and confidence of Mr. M. Mason, (who has not however done justice to his own idea,) I cannot but concur with Mr. Steevens, in ascribing these broken expressions to the letter of Cordelia. For, if the words were Kent's, there will be no intimation from the letter that can give the least insight to Cordelia's design; and the only apparent purport of it will be, to tell Kent that she knew his situation. But exclusive of this consideration, what hopes could Kent entertain, in a condition so deplorable as his, unless Cordelia should take an opportunity, from the anarchy of the kingdom, and the broils subsisting between Albany and Cornwall, of finding a time, to give losses their remedies? Curan had before mentioned to Edmund, the rumour of wars toward, between these dukes. This report had reached Cordelia, who, having also discovered the situation and fidelity of Kent, writes to inform him, that she should avail herself of the first opportunity which the enormities of the times might offer, of restoring him to her father's favour, and her father to his kingdom. [See Act III. Sc. I. Act IV. Sc. III.] HENLEY.

My reason for concurring with former editors in a supposition that the moon, not the sun, was meant by the beacon, arose from

SCENE III.

A Part of the Heath.

Enter EDGAR.

EDG. I heard myself proclaim'd:
And, by the happy hollow of a tree,
Escap'd the hunt. No port is free; no place,
That guard, and most unusual vigilance,

a consideration that the term beacon was more applicable to the moon, being, like that planet, only designed for night-service.

As to the epithet-comfortable, it suits with either luminary; for he who is compelled to travel, or sit abroad, in the night, must surely have derived comfort from the lustre of the moon.

The mention of the sun in the preceding proverbial sentence is quite accidental, and therefore ought not, in my opinion, to have weight on the present occasion.-By what is here urged, however, I do not mean to insinuate that Mr. Malone's opinion is indefensible. STEEVENS.

He

Mr. Steevens's note on this passage is extremely curious. had constantly, before my edition appeared, read, at the beginning of this scene,-good even to you; and, conformably with this notion, had inserted here, Looking up to the moon. On the appearance of my edition, and in consequence of my showing that the time was morn, and not even, and that the comfortable beacon here alluded to must be the sun, and not the moon, he alters his reading; adopts with me dawning instead of even, and omits the marginal direction, "Looking up to the moon," which he had before inserted, acknowledging that both the reading there adopted, and my reasoning, with respect to the time and to the sun, were perfectly right. And after this, he inserts a note, in direct contradiction to his own acknowledgment, in which he endeavours to prove that the word beacon may with more propriety mean the moon than the sun; though, upon the whole, my opinion is (not right; for that would be too much to allow in words, though it is acknowledged in fact but) not indefensible. Of this sort of proceeding, when the true reading is adopted from my edition, and a note inserted in defence of the spurious and rejected one, a hundred instances may be found in Mr. Steevens's editions of 1793 and 1803. MALone.

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Does not attend my taking. While I may scape,
I will preserve myself: and am bethought
To take the basest and most poorest shape,
That every penury, in contempt of man,

Brought near to beast: my face I'll grime with filth;

Blanket my loins ; elf all my hair in knots;

And with presented nakedness out-face
The winds, and persecutions of the sky.
The country gives me proof and precedent
Of Bedlam beggars, who, with roaring voices,

8 elf all my hair in knots;] Hair thus knotted, was vulgarly supposed to be the work of elves and fairies in the night. So, in Romeo and Juliet :

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plats the manes of horses in the night, "And bakes the elf-locks in foul sluttish hairs,

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'Which, once untangled, much misfortune bodes." STEEVENS.

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9 Of Bedlam beggars,] Randle Holme, in his Academy of Arms and Blazon, b. iii. c. 3, has the following passage descriptive of this class of vagabonds: The Bedlam is in the same garb, with a long staff, and a cow or ox-horn by his side; but his cloathing is more fantastick and ridiculous; for, being a madman, he is madly decked and dressed all over with rubins, feathers, cuttings of cloth, and what not? to make him seem a mad-man, or one distracted, when he is no other than a dissembling knave.”

In The Bell-man of London, by Decker, 5th edit. 1640, is another account of one of these characters, under the title of an Abraham-Man: 66 - he sweares he hath been in Bedlam, and will talke frantickely of purpose: you see pinnes stuck in sundry places of his naked flesh, especially in his armes, which paine he gladly puts himselfe to, only to make you believe he is out of his wits. He calls himselfe by the name of Poore Tom, and comming near any body cries out, Poor Tom is a-cold. Of these Abraham-men, some be exceeding merry, and doe nothing but sing songs fashioned out of their own braines: some will dance, others will doe nothing but either laugh or weepe: others are dogged, and so sullen both in loke and speech, that spying but a small company in a house, they boldly and bluntly enter, compelling the servants through feare to give them what they demand." Again, in O per se O, &c. Being an Addition, &c. to the Bellman's Second Night-walke, &c. 1612: “Crackers tyed to a dogges tayle make not the poore curre runne faster, than these

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