This reading, harsh as it is, Dr. Warburton has received, after having rejected many better. The meaning is, Let me do something in my rage, becoming the successor of Hercules,
IV.xiv.19 (230,2) Pack'd cards with Caesar, and false play'd my glory/Unto an enemy's triumph] [Warburton had explained and praised Shakespeare's "metaphor">[ This explanation is very just, the thought did not deserve so good an annotation.
IV.xiv.39 (231,3) The battery from my heart] I would read,
This battery from my heart.—
IV.xiv.49 (232,4) Seal then, and all is done] I believe the reading is,
—seel then, and all is done—
To seel hawks, is to close their eyes. The meaning will be,
—since the torch is out,
Lie down, and stray no further. How all labour
Marrs what it does.—Seel then, and all is done.