"Yet in this captious and intenable sieve
I still pour in the waters of my love,
And lack not to lose still."
For 'captious' we should certainly read, with Farmer, capacious. It was, in fact, only the omission of a letter. (See on M. for M. iv. 2.) T and c were often used indifferently before e and i. Reck might be better than 'lack.'
"And manifest experience had collected."
With Collier's folio I read manifold; "an epithet," says Mr. Dyce, "which, I apprehend, can hardly be applied to 'experience.'" Why not?
"He and his physicians
Are of a mind; he that they cannot help him,