disports > entertainments, diversions
5 You in dull corners do yourself enclose, 6 Ne taste princes' pleasures, nor do spread
Ne > [Nor do you]
7 Abroad your fresh youth's fairest flower, but lose 8 Both leaf and fruit, both too untimely shed, 9 As one in wilful bale for ever buried.
bale > torment, suffering
302.32
The time, that mortall men their weary cares
2 Do lay away, and all wilde beastes do rest,
And euery riuer eke his course +forbeares,+
4 Then doth this wicked euill thee infest,
And riue with thousand throbs thy thrilled brest;
6 Like an huge Aetn' of deepe engulfed griefe,
Sorrow is heaped in thy hollow chest,
8 Whence forth it breakes in sighes and anguish rife,
As smoke and sulphure mingled with confused strife.
3 forbeares, > forbeares 1596
1 "The time that mortal men their weary cares
that > [when]