Though calv'd in the porch o' the Capitol!...

Men. Begone,

Put not your worthy rage into your tongue."

So, I think judiciously, Tyrwhitt arranges, and he has been generally and properly followed. The folio gives the whole to Menenius, to whom it is not at all suited.


"Or Jove for 's power to thunder. His heart 's his mouth."

I would read 'in his mouth.' "My voice is in my sword" (Macb. v. 7). "He wears his tongue in his arms" (Tr. and Cress. iii. 3).


"To eject him hence

Were but one danger, and to keep him here