"Men daily find it so. Get thee away."


"Teems and feeds all; whose self-same forming metal."


"Yield him who all the human sons doth hate."

Here again, as so often, we have 'the' for thy.


"Dry up thy marrows, vines, and plough-torn leas."

For 'marrows' Mr. Dyce reads 'marrowy,' Collier's folio meadows. I read married sc. to the elms, etc. The marriage of the elm and the vine is noticed in Com. of Errors, ii. 2, Cymb. i. 7.