20 Thus, arm in arm, the king and he doth march :
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ar, Thus leaning on the shoulder of the king.He nods, and scorns, and smiles at those that pass.25 E. Mor, Doth no man take exceptions at the slave?Lan. All stomach him, but none dare speak a word.Y. Mor. Ah, that bewrays their baseness, Lan-castiBr.Were all the earls and barons of my mind,We'd hale him from the bosom of the king,30 And at the court-gate hang the peasant up ;Who, swoln with venom of ambitious pride.Will be the ruin of the realm and us. Enter the Archbishop of Canterbury, and aMessenger. War, Here comes my Lord of Canterbury's grace. Webster quotes from SirWalter Scott the followingpassage : — without vaiUng hisbonnet or testifying any reve-rence for the sanctity of therelic, — The lords are repre-sented as humbly taking offtheir 'bonnets' to Gaveston,who in return merely vouch-safes them a single goodlook, without taking off hisbonnet. 20. the king and he doth:strict grammar requires do;but these laws are often setaside by the early writers,and are at the present dayalmost constantly violated byuneducated speakers^ 26. stomach has the originalmeaning of the Latin stoTna-ehaari *to be angry at'. Now-a-days it means to bear with reluctance, though withoutopen opposition. 27. bewray is an obsoleteword which occurs more thanonce in Marlowe and means*betray'. In Anglosaxon wefind vregean, vregan *to accuse',connected with 0. H. G. ruo-gan, N. H. G. riigen. Theword occurs in the 'Bible,Matth. XXVI 73, thy speechbevurayeth thee, is frequentlyused by Spenser, and in Sh.King Lear III, he did bewrayMs practice, the quartos afforda comment on the folio byreading *betray' (see Collier). 29. hale *is the disused formof haul: the words were usedindifferently by Shakesp. andeven by Swift'. CUNN. on*Dido' p. 339. See also be-low n 2, 90, Spenser spells
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