1864-5 Hamlet. Be not too tame neither, but let your owne | discretion be | |
1865-6 your tutor, sute the action to the word, | the word to the action, with | |
1866-7 this speciall obseruance, | that you {ore-steppe} <ore-stop> not the modestie of na- | |
1867-8 ture: For any | thing so {ore-doone} <ouer-done>, is from the purpose of playing, | |
1868-9 whose | end both at the first, and novve, was and is, to holde as twere | |
1870-1 the Mirrour vp to nature, to shew vertue her <owne> | feature; scorne her own | |
1871-2 Image, and the very age and | body of the time his forme and pressure: | |