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PRO.

τη

My brave spirit! Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil Would not infect his reason?

ARI.
Not a soul
But felt a fever of the mad, and play'd

Some tricks of desperation: All, but mariners, Plung'd in the foaming brine, and quit the vessel, Then all a-fire with me: the king's son, Ferdinand, With hair up-staring (then like reeds, not hair,) Was the first man that leap'd; cried, Hell is empty, And all the devils are here.

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The word shake is so printed in Golding's version of the 9th book of Ovid's Metamorphoses, edit. 1575:

"Hee quaak't and shaak't and looked pale," &c.

STEEVENS.

But felt a fever of the mad,] If it be at all necessary to explain the meaning, it is this: Not a soul but felt such a fever as madmen feel, when the frantic fit is upon them. STEEVENS.

and quit the vessel,] Quit is, I think, here used for quitted. So, in K. Lear:

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--

'Twas he inform'd against him, "And quit the house on purpose, that their punishment Might have the freer course."

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So, in King Henry VI. P. I. lift, for lifted:

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"He ne'er lift up his hand, but conquered." MALONE.

sustaining-] i. e. their garments that bore them up and supported them. Thus, in Chapman's translation of the eleventh Iliad:

"Who fell, and crawled upon the earth with his sus-
taining palmes."

Again, in K. Lear, Act IV. sc. iv:
"In our sustaining corn."

But fresher than before: and, as thou bad'st me,
In troops I have dispers'd them 'bout the isle:
The king's son have I landed by himself;
Whom I left cooling of the air with sighs,
In an odd angle of the isle, and sitting,
His arms in this sad knot.

PRO.

Of the king's ship,

The mariners, say, how thou hast dispos'd,
And all the rest o' the fleet?

ARI.

Safely in harbour

Is the king's ship; in the deep nook, where once Thou call'dst me up at midnight to fetch dew From the still-vcx'd Bermoothes,' there she's hid; Again, in Hamlet :

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Her clothes spread wide

"And, mermaid-like, a while they bore her up."

Mr. M. Mason, however, observes that "the word sustaining in this place does not mean supporting, but enduring; and by their sustaining garments, Ariel means their garments which bore, without being injured, the drenching of the sea." STEEVENS.

1 From the still-ver'd Bermoothes,] Fletcher, in his Women Pleased, says," The devil should think of purchasing that eggshell to victual out a witch for the Beermoothes." Smith, in his account of these islands, p. 172, says, "that the Bermudas were so fearful to the world, that many called them The Isle of Devils.— P. 174. to all seamen no less terrible than an inchanted den of furies." And no wonder, for the clime was extremely subject to storms and hurricanes; and the islands were surrounded with scattered rocks lying shallowly hid under the surface of the water. WARBURTON.

The epithet here applied to the Bermudas, will be best understood by those who have seen the chafing of the sea over the rugged rocks by which they are surrounded, and which render access to them so dangerous. It was in our poet's time the current opinion, that Bermudas was inhabited by monsters, and devils. Setebos, the god of Caliban's dam, was an American devil, worshipped by the giants of Patagonia. HENLEY.

Again, in Decker's If this be not a good Play, the Devil is in it, 1012: "Sir, if you have made me tell a lye, they'll send me on a voyage to the island of Hogs and Devils, the Bermudas."

STEEVENS.

The mariners all under hatches stow'd

Whom, with a charm join'd to their suffer'd labour,
I have left asleep: and for the rest o' the fleet,
Which I dispers'd, they all have met again;
And are upon the Mediterranean flote,
Bound sadly home for Naples;

Supposing that they saw the king's ship wreck'd,
And his great person perish.

PRO.

Ariel, thy charge Exactly is perform'd; but there's more work: What is the time o' the day?"

ARI.

Past the mid season.

The opinion that Bermudas was haunted with evil spirits continued so late as the civil wars. In a little piece of Sir John Berkinghead's intitled, Two Centuries of Paul's Church-yard, una cum indice expurgatorio, &c. 12°, in page 62, under the title Cases of Conscience, is this:

"34. Whether Bermudas and the Parliament-house lie under one planet, seeing both are haunted with devils." PERCY.

Bermudas was on this account the cant name for some privileged place, in which the cheats and riotous bullies of Shakspeare's time assembled. So, in The Devil is an Ass, by Ben Jonson; keeps he still your quarter

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"In the Bermudas?" Again, in one of his Epistles:

"Have their Bermudas, and their straights i' th' Strand." Again, in The Devil is an Ass:

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I gave my word

"For one that's run away to the Bermudas." STEEVENS. the Mediterranean flote,] Flote is wave. Flot. Fr.

STEEVENS,

9 What is the time o' the day?] This passage needs not be disturbed, it being common to ask a question, which the next moment enables us to answer: he that thinks it faulty, may easily adjust it thus:

Pro. What is the time o' the day? Past the mid season?
Ari. At least two glasses.

Pro. The time 'twixt six and now.

JOHNSON.

Mr. Upton proposes to regulate this passage differently:
Ariel. Past the mid season, at least two glasses.
Pros. The time, &c. MALONE.

PRO. At least two glasses: The time 'twixt six and now,

Must by us both be spent most preciously.

ARI. Is there more toil? Since thou dost give me pains,

Let me remember thee what thou hast promis'd, Which is not yet perform'd me.

PRO.

What is't thou can'st demand?

ARI.

How now? moody?

My liberty.

PRO. Before the time be out? no more.

ARI. I pray thee Remember, I have done thee worthy service; Told thee no lies, made no mistakings, serv'd' Without or grudge, or grumblings: thou didst promise

To bate me a full year.

PRO.

Dost thou forget'

1 Told thee no lies, made no mistakings, serv'd-] The old copy has

"Told thee no lies, made thee no mistakings, serv'd-." The repetition of a word will be found a frequent mistake in the ancient editions. RITSON.

2 Dost thou forget-] That the character and conduct of Prospero may be understood, something must be known of the system of enchantment, which supplied all the marvellous found in the romances of the middle ages. This system seems to be founded on the opinion that the fallen spirits, having different degrees of guilt, had different habitations allotted them at their expulsion, some being confined in hell, some (as Hooker, who delivers the opinion of our poet's age, expresses it,) dispersed in air, some on earth, some in water, others in caves, dens, or minerals under the earth. Of these, some were more malignant and mischievous than others. The earthy spirits seem to have been thought the most depraved, and the aerial the less vitiated. Thus Prospero observes of Ariel: Thou wast a spirit too delicate

To act her earthy and abhorr'd commands.

Over these spirits a power might be obtained by certain rites per

From what a torment I did free thee?

ARI.

PRO. Thou dost? and think'st

No.

It much, to tread the ooze of the salt deep;
To run upon the sharp wind of the north;
To do me business in the veins o' the earth,
When it is bak'd with frost.

ARI.

I do not, sir.

PRO. Thou liest, malignant thing! Hast thou

forgot

The foul witch Sycorax,3 who, with age, and envy, Was grown into a hoop? hast thou forgot her?

formed or charms learned. This power was called The black Art, or Knowledge of Enchantment. The enchanter being (as king James observes in his Demonology) one who commands the devil, whereas the witch serves him. Those who thought best of this art, the existence of which was, I am afraid, believed very seriously, held, that certain sounds and characters had a physical power over spirits, and compelled their agency; others, who condemned the practice, which in reality was surely never practised, were of opinion, with more reason, that the power of charms arose only from compact, and was no more than the spirits voluntarily allowed them for the seduction of man. The art was held by all, though not equally criminal, yet unlawful, and therefore Casaubon, speaking of one who had commerce with spirits, blames him, though he imagines him one of the best kind, who dealt with them by way of command. Thus Prospero repents of his art in the last scene. The spirits were always considered as in some measure enslaved to the enchanter, at least for a time, and as serving with unwillingness; therefore Ariel so often begs for liberty; and Caliban observes, that the spirits serve Prospero with no good will, but hate him rootedly. Of these trifles enough. JOHNSON.

The foul witch Sycorax,] This idea might have been caught from Dionyse Settle's Reporte of the Last Voyage of Capteine Frobisher, 12mo. bl. 1. 1577. He is speaking of a woman found on one of the islands described. "The old wretch, whome diuers of our Saylers supposed to be a Diuell, or a Witche, plucked off her buskins, to see if she were clouen footed, and for her ougly hewe and deformitie, we let her goe." STEEVENS.

VOL. IV.

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