Notes to Shakespeare — Volume 01: Comedies by Samuel Johnson
page 23 of 292 (07%)
page 23 of 292 (07%)
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[Fer. my prime request,
Which I do last pronounce, is, O you wonder! If you be maid, or no? Mira. No wonder, Sir; But, certainly, a maid.] [Nothing could be more prettily imagined to illustrate the singularity of her character, than this pleasant mistake. W.] Dr. Warburton has here found a beauty, which I think the author never intended. Ferdinand asks her not whether she was a _created being_, a question which, if he meant it, he has ill expressed, but whether she was unmarried; for after the dialogue which Prospero's interruption produces, he goes on pursuing his former question. _O, if a virgin, I'll make you queen of Naples_. I.ii.439 (32,5) [controul thee] Confute thee, unanswerably contradict thee. I.ii.471 (33,7) [come from thy ward] Desist from any hope of awing me by that posture of defence. II.i.3 (36,1) [our hint of woe] _Hint_ is that which recals to the memory. The cause that fills our minds with grief is common. Dr. Warburton reads _stint_ of woe. II.i.11 (36,3) [_Ant._ The visitor will not give him o'er so] Why Dr. Warburton should change _visitor_ to _'vizer_ for _adviser_, I cannot discover. Gonzalo gives not only advice, but comfort, and is therefore properly called _The Visitor_, like others who visit the |
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