I give 'By land' to Cæsar. See on As You Like it, ii. 1.


"In her pavilion (cloth of gold of tissue)."

With Collier's folio I read and for 'of.' See Final Note to Comus in my Milton.


"The silken tackle

Swell with the touches of the flower-soft hands,

That yarely frame the office."

'Swell' (sc. with pride, i.e. are elate) no doubt makes good sense; but the words of North's Plutarch are "Others tending the tackle and ropes of the barge, out of which there came a wonderful sweet savour of perfumes, that perfumed the wharf's side." Smell, the reading of Collier's folio, is therefore probably right. In the last line 'the' should, I think, be their.