"No such jade as you, if me you mean."

We might read 'Not such a jade.' Mr. Dyce reads, after Collier's folio, 'as bear you,' which is better, and which I follow.


"'Tis in his tail.—'Tis in his tongue.—Whose tongue?"


"The gain I seek is quiet me the match."

For 'me' Rowe properly read in.


"Myself am struck in years I must confess."

There must be a line at least lost after this.