Cursory Notes On Various Passages in the Text of Beaumont And Fletcher

Cover Cursory Notes On Various Passages in the Text of Beaumont And Fletcher
Cursory Notes On Various Passages in the Text of Beaumont And Fletcher
Mitford, John, 1781-1859
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See the word "parenthesis," in Webster's * Northward Hoe,* vol. iii, p. 242, od. Dyce ; Daye's Law IVicks, 1600 ; sig. D 4, in another sense.
Digitized by Google 32 v.
And take heed, sir, h^ Nature bent to goodness (So straight a«edar*>to himself, uprightness Being wrested'nom his true life, prove not dangerous.
The. difficulty seems most to exist in the fourth line — So straight a cedar to himself, uprightness, and how to adapt it to the rest of the speech.
The old editions thus : — And take h
...eed, sir, liow Nature bent to goodnesse (So straight a cedar to himselfe) uprightnesse, JBe wrested from its true life, prove not dangerous.
On these lines Mr. Seward has made no less than fve amendments — only one of which Mr. Mason thinks to be necessary. Heath's MS. notes also contain an alteration^ that must be put aside without hesitation. The passage may have been originally ill expressed or materially injured by some means, probably by the transcriber or printer's negligence; and no conjecture can recover the true and exact reading of the author.


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