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hould lie i' the bosom of Our hard rul'd king." There is great stiffness and tameness in the matter in many places. Lastly, what MR. HICKSON hopes he has taken off Shakspeare's shoulders, the compliments to the Queen and the King, is brought in here most forcedly:-- "She (_i.e._ A. Boleyn) is a gallant creature, and complete In mind and feature. I persuade me, from her Will fall some blessings to this land, which shall In it be memoriz'd." But there is also the general question, whether, either upon _a priori_ probability, or inferences derived from particular passages, we are bound to suppose that the two authors wrote scene by scene. Shakspeare might surely be allowed to touch up scenes, of which the mass might be written by Fletcher. As to the dates, MR. COLLIER is persuaded that _Henry VIII._ was written in the winter of 1603-4. The accession of James was in March, 1603. MR. COLLIER thinks that the compliments to Queen Elizabeth were not written in her lifetime. He thinks that, even in the last year of her long reign, no one would have ventured to call her an "aged princess," though merely as a way of saying that she would have a long reign; and he says, there is not the slightest evidence that the compliment to King James was an interpolation. But surely it is strong evidence that if there is no interpolation, this passage-- "As when The bird of wonder dies, the maiden phoenix," afterwards-- "When Heav'n shall call her from this cloud of darkness," and then, after disposing of the King-- "She shall be to the happiness of England An aged princess . . . . . . . . . Would I had known no more--but she must die; She must--the saints must have her yet a virgin," &c. {191} would be ridiculous. All that can be said is, that either way it is partly ridiculous to make it a matter of prophecy and lamentation that a human being must, sometime or other, die. But it is very difficult to conceive that the compliments to Elizabeth should have been written after her death. Fletcher, born in 1579, did not, in Mr. Dyce's opinion, bring out anything singly or jointly with Beaumont till 1606 or 1607. The irrelevant scenes, like that of Ventidius, are introduced with two objects--one to gain time, the other for the sake of naturalness: of the latter of which there are two instances in _Macbeth_; one where the King talks of the swallows'
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