To call hers, exquisite, in question more."
This is not very intelligible. We might read 'her exquisite,' or rather 'to question.' To "call in question," in Shakespeare always means, to express a doubt of. 'Question' is examine, a word just used.
Sc. 2.
"Earth hath swallowed all my hopes but she,
She is the hopeful lady of my earth."
Here a rime is lost, in consequence of the 'earth' of the first line being in the printer's mind. There can be little question, I should think, that the original word was not 'earth,' but fee, feud, fief, landed property, as in knight's fee, in fee, etc., with which alone 'lady' accords. 'The earth' has long been the reading the first line.
"Which on more view of many—mine being one,
May stand in number, though in reckoning none" ...