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tion. The king is represented as an intemperate drinker -Ophelia, who, doubtless, has some skill in uroscopy, applies this speech to the king, with reference to the diuertic quality of onions.-Verbum sapienti.

Should the concise manner in which I treat this subject expose me to the charge either of fastidious brevity or of delicacy of expression squeamishly refined, I trust that my celebrated note upon potatoes* (wherein I have so clearly and so minutely explained the various qualities of that invaluable plant) will be received in refutation, and that it will convince the world that I want neither talent nor inclination to indulge in prurient description.

COLLINS.

(g)-Mill him.

To mill is to whack, or to thump. See the Slang Dictionary, St. Giles's Edition.

JOHNSON.

The Billingsgate edition of the Slang Dictionary, which, in point of accuracy, I conceive to be the least exceptionable, explains it, to knuckle, or, to lather.

STEEVENS.

* See note upon" potatoes," and the useful and entertaining extract from GERARD's Herbal. TROILUS AND CRESSIDA, Act IV.

(h)-We're bewitch'd, 'tis plain.

Hamlet's meaning appears to me to be this: I know not how to account for the succession of calamities which has befallen us, otherwise than by supposing that we labour under the malevolent influence of witchcraft.'

JOHNSON.

(i)-Towzer.

Probably the name of the royal watch-dog.

JOHNSON.

(k) Anon he's patient as a hungry mouser.

This passage is incorrect.

I cannot believe that

patience is characteristic of a hungry animal.

POPE.

The difficulty of this passage will be solved by supplying an apostrophe, which, doubtless, was intended to mark the elision of the a in hungry; and by substituting a capital H for a small one.

We must understand a Hungary (for Hungarian)

mouser.

WARBURTON.

This emendation is so ingenious that I am sorry it is not just for the passage, in its present state is not only correct, but eminently beautiful. The Queen compares the patience of Hamlet to that which, after a long privation from food, is exhibited by a mouser whilst watching for its prey.

JOHNSON.

There is yet a beauty which Dr. Johnson has passed without notice. The Queen not only compares Hamlet's occasional patience to that of a hungry mouser, but, at the same time, contrasts it with his paroxysms of ferocity, resembling the growlings of a watch-dog: whence it is common to say of two persons who live discordantly, that "they agree like cat and dog."

It may not be altogether uninteresting to the curious reader, to know that a mouser is a cat which is trained up for the purpose of killing RATS as well as mice. So in Chaucer's Romaunt de la rose, ver. 6204:

66

-Gibbe, our cat,

"That waiteth mice and RATS to killen."

STEEVENS.

(1) The trumpet's tantarara, post, shall set off—

Either this passage is in itself a nonsensical rhapsody, or, partly through the caprice and partly through the negligence of successive editors, it has been corrupted. By substituting a hyphen for the comma, between tantarara and post, we obtain a faint glimmering of its meaning; and even then it remains to discover what is meant by a tantarara-post.

THEOBALD.

The punctuation of this passage requires no alteration. Tantarara is a word imitative of the note of the trumpet, as tattoo is of the beat of the drum. The trumpet's tantarara, post, shall set off, means the tantarara of the trumpet shall set off after (post) the loud tattoo of the drum.

WARBURTON.

Dr. Warburton has very far exceeded Mr. Theobald in his approaches towards the sense of this difficult passage; yet he has not quite hit the mark. Our poet, doubtless, intended, the trumpet's tantarara, post (i. e. post-haste), shall set off, which is more poetical and much finer than it is rendered by Dr. Warburton's common-place explanation of post.

STEEVENS.

Sir John Hawkins is of opinion that tān-tă-rā-ră is not exactly imitative of the note of the trumpet, which is tān-tă-ră-rā-rā; but Dr. Burney assures me that it was not until about the middle of the seventeenth century that this innovation in trumpetology was known, when it was introduced by one Hans Von Puffenblowenschwartz, trumpeter to the gallant Prince Rupert. Of this our author could not possibly have had any knowledge.

(m)-Bread-basket.

JOHNSON.

This is poetical. Hamlet strikes Laertes in the stomach: the stomach being the depository for food (the pantry, as it were, of the human frame), it is metaphorically termed the bread-basket.

(n)—I'm dish'd

WARBURTON.

In culinary language, "to be dished" is to be served up: but, by a licentia poetica," I'm dish'd" is here used for I'm served out.

So in another part of this play:

WARBURTON.

"That last cross-buttock dish'd me."

MALONE

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