"Thou makest the triumviry, the corner-cap of society,
The shape of Love's Tyburn, that hangs up simplicity."
This is no rime; the poet must have written sobriety in the second line.
"Disfigure not his shop."
As 'hose' has just occurred, Theobald read slop, which both Singer and Dyce properly adopt. The usual reading is shape.
"Oh, most divine Kate!
Oh, most prophane coxcomb!"
Both rime and metre demand pate in the second line (see Introd. p. [63]). The whole dialogue, with this exception, is in rime.