To have his pomp and all what state comprehends
But only painted, like his varnish'd friends?"
I have ventured on these corrections, as this part of the speech is in rime. The folio reads 'compounds.' Collier's folio and Sidney Walker also propose comprehends. For 'or to live' we might read 'or would live.' See Temp. iii. 1.
"I'll follow and enquire him out, and then."
Sc. 3.
"The greater scorns the lesser; not even that nature,
To which all sores lay siege, can bear great fortune