his frequent haunts. Cf. “Comus,” 314: “my daily walks and ancient neighborhood.”
[P. 37.] coheres semblably together. Cf. 2 “Henry IV,” v, i, 72: “to see the semblable coherence.”
It has been ingeniously remarked, by Coleridge, “Seven Lectures on Shakespeare and Milton,” p. 116: “The power of poetry is, by a single word perhaps, to instil that energy into the mind, which compels the imagination to produce the picture.... Here, by introducing a single happy epithet, ‘crying,’ a complete picture is presented to the mind, and in the production of such pictures the power of genius consists.”
me and thy crying self. “Tempest,” i, 2, 132.
What! man. “Macbeth,” iv, 3, 208.
Rosencrans. The early editions consistently misspell this name Rosencraus.
Man delights not me. “Hamlet,” ii, 2, 321.
a combination and a form. “Hamlet,” iii, 4, 60.
[P. 39.] There is a willow, etc. See “Hamlet,” iv, 7, 167:
“There is a willow grows aslant a brook
That shows his hoar leaves in the glassy stream.”