To do this when I bade thee? Do it at once; But accidents unpurpos'd. Draw, and come. EROS. Turn from me then that noble counte nance, Wherein the worship of the whole world' lies. ANT. Lo thee. EROS. My sword is drawn. ANT. [Turning from him. Then let it do at once My dear master, The thing why thou hast drawn it. EROS. EROS. Farewell, great chief. Shall I strike now? Of Antony's death. ANT. [Dies. Thrice nobler than myself! Thou teachest me, O valiant Eros, what I should, and thou could'st not. My queen and Eros A bridegroom in my death,3 and run into't 2 -the worship of the whole world-] The worship, is the dignity, the authority. JOHNSON. 3 So, in King John: "By giving it the worship of revenge.". STEEVENS. But I will be A bridegroom in my death, &c.] This thought has occurred before in Measure for Measure: "I will encounter darkness as a bride, "And hug it in my arms.' As to a lover's bed. Come then; and, Eros, [Falling on his Sword. I learn'd of thee. How! not yet dead?* not dead?— The guard!-ho!5-O, despatch me. Dryden's Don Sebastian has the same image, though more luxuriantly expressed: "The sprightly bridegroom on his wedding night STEEVENS. Stowe, describing the execution of Sir Charles Davers, one of the Earl of Essex's associates, says, that "having put off his gown and doublet in a most cheerful manner, rather like a bridegroom than a prisoner appointed for death, he prayed very devoutly." MALone. not yet dead?] Yet, which is wanting in the old copy, was supplied by Mr. Pope. STEEvens. The guard!-ho!] [Old copy-guard how.] I suspect the poet wrote: The guard, ho! O, despatch me! So, afterwards: "What, ho! the emperor's guard!" In the last scene of the third Act, he has said "Authority melts from me. Of late, when I cried ho, "Like boys unto a muss, kings would start forth, "And cry, your will?" The same mistake has happened in The Merchant of Venice. See Vol. VII. p. 379, n. 1. And twice in the original copy of Hamlet, 1604: "Queen. Help, how!" "Pol. What how, help." Again, in the last Act: "O villainy! how, let the door be lock'd." The emendation which I have proposed, ought therefore certainly to be admitted into the text. MALONE. I find this emendation already admitted into the text of edition 1785. STEEVENS. Enter DERCETAS and Guard. 1 GUARD. What's the noise? ANT. I have done my work ill, friends; O, make an end Of what I have begun. 2 GUARD. 1 GUARD. And time is at his period. ALL. The star is fallen. Alas, and woe! Not I. [Exeunt Guard. ANT. Let him that loves me, strike me dead. 1 GUARD. 2 GUARD. Nor I. 3 GUARD. Nor any one. DER. Thy death and fortunes bid thy followers fly. This sword but shown to Cæsar, with this tidings, Shall enter me with him. and give me ANT. Art thou there, Diomed? Draw thy sword, Sufficing strokes for death. DIO. My mistress Cleopatra sent me to thee. ANT. When did she send thee? DIO. ANT. Most absolute lord, Now, my lord. Where is she? DIO. Lock'd in her monument. She had a prophesying fear 6 Of what hath come to pass: for when she saw But, fearing since how it might work, hath sent ANT. Too late, good Diomed :-Call my guard, DIO. What, ho! the emperor's guard! The Come, your lord calls. Enter some of the Guard. ANT. Bear me, good friends, where Cleopatra bides; 'Tis the last service that I shall command you. 1 GUARD. Woe are we, sir, you may not live to All wear your true followers out. ALL. Most heavy day! ANT. Nay, good my fellows, do not please sharp fate a prophesying fear-] I suppose our author designed we should read: —a prophet's fear. STEEVENS. 7 She had dispos'd with Caesar,] To dispose, in this instance, perhaps signifies to make terms, to settle matters. STEEVENS. But as the second • Woe are we,] Old copy-Woe, woe,—. woe appears (for it spoils the verse) to have been accidentally repeated by the compositor, I have left it out. STEEVENS. Το grace it with [Exeunt, bearing ANTONY, SCENE XIII. The same. A Monument. Enter above, CLEOPATRA, CHARMIAN, and IRAS. CLEO. O Charmian, I will never go from hence. CHAR. Be comforted, dear madam. CLEO. No, I will not: All strange and terrible events are welcome, But comforts we despise; our size of sorrow, Proportion'd to our cause, must be as great Enter DIOMedes. As that which makes it.-How now? is he dead? His death's upon him, but not dead.] The defective measure, and want of respect in the speaker, induce me to suppose, that this line originally stood thus: His death's upon him, madam, but not dead. STEEVENS. |