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The battle, it will be seen, is represented only by military music within the tiring-house, which formed the back of the stage. ‘The scene,’ says Spedding, ‘does not change; but ‘alarums’ are heard, and afterwards a ‘retreat,’ and on the same field over which that great army has this moment passed, fresh and full of hope, reappears, with tidings that all is lost, the same man who last left the stage to follow and fight in it. That Shakespeare meant the scene to stand thus, no one who has the true faith will believe.’

Spedding’s suggestion is that things are here run together which Shakespeare meant to keep apart. Shakespeare, he thinks, continued Act to the ‘exit Edgar’ after l. 4 of the above passage. Thus, just before the close of the Act, the two British armies and the French army had passed across the stage, and the interest of the audience in the battle about to be fought was raised to a high pitch. Then, after a short interval, Act opened with the noise of battle in the distance, followed by the entrance of Edgar to announce the defeat of Cordelia’s army. The battle, thus, though not fought on the stage, was shown and felt to be an event of the greatest importance.

Apart from the main objection of the entire want of evidence of so great a change having been made, there are other objections to this idea and to the reasoning on which it is based. (1) The pause at the end of the present Fourth Act is far from ‘faulty,’ as Spedding alleges it to be; that Act ends with the most melting scene Shakespeare ever wrote; and a pause after it, and before the business of the battle, was perfectly right. (2) The Fourth Act is already much longer than the Fifth (about fourteen columns of the Globe edition against about eight and a half), and Spedding’s change would give the Fourth nearly sixteen columns, and the Fifth less than seven. (3) Spedding’s proposal requires a much greater alteration in the existing text than he