IV.v.48 (107,4) Why, beg then] For the sake of rhime we should read,
Why beg two.
If you think kisses worth begging, beg more than one.
IV.v.52 (107,5) Never's my day, and then a kiss of you] I once gave both these lines to Cressida. She bids Ulysses beg a kiss; he asks that he may have it,
When Helen is a maid again—
She tells him that then he shall have it:
When Helen is a maid again—
Cre. I am your debtor, claim it when 'tis due;
Never's my day, and then a kiss for you.
But I rather think that Ulysses means to slight her, and that the present reading is right.