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TABLE OF CORRUPTED READINGS,

NO RESTORATION OF WHICH IS ATTEMPTED IN THE TEXT OF THIS EDITION, AND OF PASSAGES THE PURITY OF WHICH IS DOUBTFUL.

[Those passages in which corruption is only suspected are indicated by an interrogation mark (?).]

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Act IV. Sc. 1.

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Sc. 3.

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LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST.

"Concolinel."

"To see him kiss his, hand," &c. [A line lost, perhaps.] (?)

"The hue of dungeons and the schoole of night." (?) "And when Love speaks, the voice of all the gods Make Heaven drowsy," &c. (?)

Act V. Sc. 1. "I do beseech thee, remember thy courtesy." (?)

A MIDSUMMER-NIGHT'S DREAM.

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"The human mortals want their winter here."
"That is hot ice and wondrous strange snow." (?)
"These lily lips." (?)

AS YOU LIKE IT.

Act III. Sc. 3. "hornes even so poore men alone." (?)

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ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL.

"Not my virginity yet," &c. [Hiatus.]

"The fellow has a deal of that too much," &c. (?)

"I see that men make ropes in such a scarre.'
99

THE WINTER'S TALE.

Act II. Sc. 1. "I would land-damn him." (?)

KING HENRY V.

Act II. Chorus. "Th' abuse of distance: force a play."

FIRST PART OF KING HENRY VI.
"And even these three days have I watch'd," &c.
"Confounds the tongue, and makes the senses crouch."

Act I. Sc. 4.
Act V. Sc. 3.

Act II. Sc. 1.

Act V. Sc. 3.

KING RICHARD III.

"Of you, and you, Lord Rivers, and of Dorset."

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Act I. Sc. 3.

Act III. Sc. 2.

Act IV. Sc. 4.

Act V. Sc. 1.

Sc. 3.

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"—such preposterous discoveries." (?)
the captive Grecians fall." (?)

CORIOLANUS.

"At Grecian swords contending." (?)
"Let them be made an overture," &c. (?)
"Why in this wolvish gown?" (?)

(?)

"I have a heart as little apt as yours." [Line missing?]
"And to have his worth of contradiction." (?)
"Bound with an oath to yield," &c.

TITUS ANDRONICUS.

Act II. Sc. 5.

"Which that sweet tongue hath made."

Act V. Sc. 3."

give me aim a while." (?)

ROMEO AND JULIET.

Act III. Sc. 5. "God's bread! it makes me mad."

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TIMON OF ATHENS.

"In a wide sea of wax." (?)
"Therefore he will be Timon."

"That I had no angry wit to be a lord."
"Much good dich thy good heart." (?)
66 nor resumes no care." (?)
"Never mind

Was to be so unwise," &c. (?)

"He cannot want fifty-five hundred talents." (?)
"that I should purchase the day before for a little
part." (?)

"Of man and beast the infinite malady." (?)

"And to make whores a bawd." (?)

JULIUS CÆSAR.

"For if thou path thy native visage on.”
"Impatient of my absence." (?)

MACBETH.

"So they doubly redoubled strokes," &c. (")
"If you shall cleave to my consent." (?)
"Unsafe the while that we must lave." (?)

"For where there is advantage to be given." (?)

HAMLET.

"As stars with trains of fire."

the dram of eale

Doth all the noble substance of a doubt."

"Woo't drink up Esill?" (?)

" a kind of yesty collection which carries them through," &c.

KING LEAR.

"Hath been out nine years, and away," &c. (?)

OTHELLO.

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"— and my demerits may speak unbonneted.” (?)
"Nor to comply with heat the young affects
In my defunct and proper satisfaction."

"Does tire the ingeny." (?)

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ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA.

"As we rate boys, who being mature in knowledge." "Possess it; I'll make answer." (?)

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"To second ills with ills, each ill the worse.” (?) "Think that you are upon a rock."

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INDEX

TO GLOSSARIAL, EXEGETICAL, ANTIQUARIAN, AND
HISTORICAL NOTES.

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refuse, viii. 441.

abide, x. 412.

abjects, viii. 274.

Abraham man, xi. 342.

abridge my doleful days, vi. 545.

abridgment, iv. 122.
abroad, xii. 292.

absey-book, vi. 108.
absolute, vii. 134.
aby, iv. 113, 115.
Academe, iii. 445.
accept, vii. 145.
accordingly, v. 127.
accost, v. 244.
accosting, ix. 159.
ache, iii. 212, 332.
aches, ii. 87; x. 294.

achievement is command, ix. 142.
Adam, iii. 321.

addition, x. 516; xi. 337.
address'd, iv. 123, 385; x. 409.

adieu! adieu! Hamlet, &c., xi. 171.
admirable, iv. 122.

admiration, xi. 182, 335.

admit no other way to save his life,
&c., iii. 119.

Adonis' gardens, vii. 254.

advance, x. 295.

adversaries, iv. 492.

adversary's, v. 134.

advertised, vii. 397; viii. 121.

advertisement, iii. 340.

advice, vii. 126.

Egle, iv. 103.

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affy, ix. 431.

agate, iii. 328; vi. 533.
agate stone, x. 154.

Agenor, daughter of, iv. 489.
aggravate his style, ii. 316.
Agincourt, forces at, vii. 139.
aglet-baby, iv. 491.

agnize, xi. 495.

ah, sirrah, iv. 381.

aim, iii. 213; ix. 437, 443.

Aio, te, Eacida, vii. 386.

Ajax, allusion to Sophocles' trage-
dy of, ix. 432.
Ajax's fury, vii. 399.

a Lancaster! viii. 128.
Albany, xi. 329.
alderlievest, vii. 381.
ale, ii. 187.

a leaven, iv. 244; xii. 403.
Alençon and Henry V., vii. 142.
ales, xii. 395.

Alexander's head awry in, iii. 475.
all, vii. 387.

allow vox, v. 265.
allowed, iii. 474.
allowing, v. 386.

all-to, x. 514; xii. 401.

all what state compounds, x. 302.
alms-deed, iii. 327.

alter the article of thy gentry, ii. 312.
Althea, vi. 539; vii. 383.

always thought, that I require a
clearness, x. 525.

a making, xi. 168.

a many, viii. 296.

ames-ace, v. 125.

amort, iv. 499; vii. 258.

Amurath, vi. 560.

anachronisms, v. 394; vi. 107; ix.

149, 309; xii. 136, 142.

anchor's, xi. 181.

ancient, vi. 409; xi. 492.
ancient Pistol, vi. 543.
and happy, xii. 406.

and others when the bag-pipe sings,

iv. 257.

Andren, viii. 435.

Andrew, iv. 237.
angel, iv. 499.

angels, ii. 309.

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