"It is the base, though bitter disposition of Beatrice."
For 'though,' which can hardly be right, the usual reading is the, the correction of Johnson, which is very good; the words were easily confounded, especially when though was written tho'.
"That I stood like a man at a mark, with a whole army shooting at me."
We should expect him; but 'me' may have been the poet's word. For the first 'at' we might perhaps read as.
"All that Adam had left him before he transgressed."
There must certainly be an error either in 'left' or in 'before.' For the latter we might read after; for the former perhaps lent or about. I think the true reading is lent, in which I had been anticipated by Collier's folio. Lend was constantly used in the sense of give. "I can lend you letters to divers officers," etc. (Jonson, Every Man out, etc. iii. 1.) It is not quite out of use yet.