64
ROMEO AND JULIET
[ACT II.
Virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied, |
Enter Romeo.[C 5]
Rom. | Good morrow, father. |
Fri. | Benedicite! What early tongue so sweet[C 6] saluteth me? Young son, it argues a distemper'd head So soon to bid good morrow[E 7] to thy bed: Care keeps his watch[E 8] in every old man's eye, 35 |
- ↑ 23. weak] A gain on small Q 1, as opposed to power, line 24.
- ↑ 24. medicine] Warburton conjectured medicinal, and Capell medicine's.
- ↑ 25. that part] the odorous part; or, as Malone explains, "the olfactory nerves," with meaning together with. The comma after smelt is in F; absent from Q, which has a comma after part.
- ↑ 26. slays] Mommsen accepts Q stays, in the sense "brings to a standstill."
- ↑ 27. kings] Rowe reads kinds. Malone compares A Lover's Complaint, 202, 203.
"Effects of terror and dear modesty,
Encamp'd in hearts, but fighting outwardly." - ↑ 30. canker] the canker-worm, as in Midsummer Night's Dream, II. ii. 3; and Venus and Adonis, line 656.
- ↑ 34. good morrow] Here a parting good morrow.
- ↑ 35. watch] waking, as in Hamlet, II. ii. 148.