Sc. 3.
"To leave's a thousand times more bitter than."
"Yet if that quarrel, by fortune, do divorce."
I think the passage thus gains sense: "I found by fortune" (Othel. v. 2). "And shalt, by fortune, once more resurvey" (Son. xxxii.). Hanmer read 'quarreler,' and Warburton said 'quarrel' was arrow. 'It' is the 'pomp' just mentioned.
"You'd venture an emballing."
Warburton read embalming; Steevens empalling.
"Commends his good opinion of you [to you] and