FOOTNOTES:

FOOTNOTES:[685]The inverted iron horns or tubes, a few of which still remain on lamp-posts and gates, were formerly used as extinguishers to the torches which were thrust into them.

[685]The inverted iron horns or tubes, a few of which still remain on lamp-posts and gates, were formerly used as extinguishers to the torches which were thrust into them.

[685]The inverted iron horns or tubes, a few of which still remain on lamp-posts and gates, were formerly used as extinguishers to the torches which were thrust into them.

affects, iii.60again, ii. 161a-good, ii. 49air of life, ii. 217Albertus, i. 220.Alcides' post, i. 105a-life, iii.175Alleyn, Edward, ii. 6Almain rutters, i. 112amorous, i. 121Antwerp, blockade of, i. 217aphorisms, i. 213appointed, ii. 190approve, iii.263Aquarius, iii.279Arden of Feversham, quoted, ii. 89argins, i. 149Ariosto, incident taken from, i. 177artier, i. 45axes, iii.255azur'd, i. 276bable, iii.299Badgeth, i. 115baiting, iii.99ballace, ii. 335bandy, ii. 125Banks' horse, iii.232Barabas' nose, ii. 47basilisks, i. 67bassoes, i. 48bastones, i. 57bevers, i. 246bezzling, iii.247bid a base, ii. 191bill, i. 213bird-bolt, iii.96blazing star, iii.225block, iii.226blubbered, i. 85bombards, ii. 105border, iii.129boss, i. 62Boulogne, taking of, iii.224Bourne, Vincent, hisCantatrices, iii.238bousing-glass, iii.247brave, i. 21braves, ii. 175Brest, expedition against, iii.239Britainy, ii. 10bugs, i. 164bullets wrapt in fire, ii. 40burn, iii.234by, ii. 14Cadiz, expedition against, iii.48carbonadoes, i. 79case, i. 246cast, ii. 165Catullus imitated, iii.89catzery, ii. 89cavaliero, i. 141cazzo, ii. 75centronel, ii. 328champion, i. 32channel (collar-bone), i. 125channel (gutter), ii. 127cleapt, iii.98cleys, iii.279clift, i. 206clout, i. 37coated, iii.314coll, ii. 354colts, i. 180competitor, i. 25confits, iii.85convertite, ii. 22counterfeit, i. 51counterscarfs, iii.228covent, ii. 78covered way, i. 149Creusa's crown, allusion to, ii. 207cross, ii. 52cross-biting, ii. 89cullions, ii. 148curst, iii.225custom, ii. 13cypress, iii.51Damasco, i. 84Damascus walls, i. 87damned, i. 204dang'd, iii.37Daniel, Samuel, allusions to, iii.232,242debasement of coinage, iii.225defend, ii. 272deserved, ii. 190Devil (he that eats with the Devil had need of a long spoon), ii. 67die, ii. 119Dis, iii.36discoloured, iii.10dittany, ii. 205double cannons, i. 252Drayton, Michael, allusion to, iii.228earns, ii. 202ecues, ii. 244elephant, object of wonder, iii.217Elze, Dr. Karl, emendation by, ii. 364enginous, iii.52entrance, ii. 252erring, i. 223exercise, ii. 84exhibition, ii. 280exocœtus, ii. 154eyas, iii.62eye, by the, ii. 68eyelids of the day, ii. 38falc'nets, i. 152false-brays, iii.228fancy, ii. 339far-fet, ii. 344favour, iii.97fawns, iii.92fet, iii.268few, in, ii. 68fleering, ii. 161fleet, i. 61flour, iii.11flying-fish, ii. 154foil (check), i. 64foil (stain), i. 170foreslow, ii. 167frost of 1564, iii.224gabions, i. 154garboils, iii.255Gascoigne, George, iii.226gaunt, iii.236gear, i. 31give arms, i. 164glorious, i. 70gobbets, iii.111grate, iii.215guess, i. 313Guilpin'sSkialetheiaquoted, iii.214,238Guise, the, ii. 9had I wist, ii. 172halcyon's bill, ii. 12Hammon, Master Thomas, ii. 4Harington, Sir John, hisAjax, iii.231;his dog Bungey, iii.245harness, ii. 324Hatton, Sir Christopher, his monument, iii.217haught, ii. 176Havre, expedition against, iii.224hay, ii. 122head (to head, to head!), iii.241hebon, ii. 68held in hand, ii. 61Hermoso piarer, etc., ii. 38het, iii.47hey-pass, i. 266Heywood, John, iii.231hold a wolf by the ears, ii. 212horsebread, i. 257horse-courser, i. 264hugy, i. 59Hunkes, Harry, iii.242I, old spelling foray, i. 78. (The formIhas been retained, perhaps unnecessarily, throughout.)imbast, iii.192impartial, ii. 60imperance, iii.55imprecations, i. 85incontinent, i. 11incony, ii. 93injury (verb), i. 16intire, iii.49investion, i. 16ippocras, i. 256Irish kerns, ii. 160jesses, ii. 155jig, ii. 161John the Great, i. 128Jubalter, i. 128Judas, ii. 95keend, ii. 372keep, ii. 245Knave's acre, i. 229knights of the post, iii.128known of, i. 266lake, ii. 226lanch, i. 22Lantchidol, i. 114lawnds, ii. 312leaguer, i. 127leave, ii. 327Lepidus, his printed dog, iii.245let, i. 80liefest, ii. 373lightly borne, iii.107linstock, ii. 107Lopez, Doctor, i. 266love-lock, iii.226lown, ii. 135mails, i. 22malgrado, ii. 169malice (verb), i. 15mandrake juice, ii. 99March beer, i. 247Martlemas beef, i. 247mate, i. 13, 211measures, i. 188merchants, i. 24mere, iii.44merit, iii.266Milton quoted, ii. 38; iii.22minions, i. 152miss, i. 173Mithridate, i. 89moorish fool, iii.50More, Sir Thomas, allusion to a Latin epigram by, iii.235Moroccus, i. 58mottoes at the end of plays, i. 283Mount Falcon, ii. 253mounted his chariot, i. 183muschatoes, ii. 84Muse (masculine), i. 211muted, iii.241neck-verse, ii. 83need, i. 119nepenthe, iii.234nephew, ii. 329no way but one, i. 92nymph, ii. 360old Edward, ii. 218on cai me on, i. 213ostry, i. 267other some, iii.85Ovid imitated, i. 25packed, ii. 359paised, iii.25parbreak, i. 95Paris-Garden, iii.241pash, i. 59pass, i. 13Paul's churchyard, iii.251Paul's steeple struck by lightning, iii.225pentacle, iii.45Perkins, Richard, ii. 6.Petrarch'sItinerarium Syriacumquoted, i. 250pheres, iii.66pickadevaunts, i. 228pilling, i. 65pin, i. 37pioners, i. 50pitch, i. 28places, ii. 258plage, i. 83plat, iii.81plates, ii. 44platform, ii. 363Plato's year, i. 74play the man, i. 159play-houses, hours of performance at, iii.238.Pont Neuf, iii.236porcupine darting her quills, ii. 121port, i. 30portagues, ii. 28prest, i. 116pretend (i.e.portend), ii. 64pretend (i.e.intend), ii. 104prevail, i. 141prize played, ii. 7proin, iii.66prorex, i. 12purchase, i. 42put by, iii.17quenchless, ii. 323qui mihi discipulus, i. 229quit, ii. 367quite, ii. 282quod tumeraris, i. 224racking, i. 179ray, iii.180ream, ii. 88rebated, i. 177reflex, i. 50regiment, i. 13renied, Christians, i. 48renowned, i. 24resolve, i. 13respect, ii. 142retorqued, i. 94Rhamnus, i. 35Rhodes, i. 212ringled, iii.29rising in the North, iii.224rivelled, ii. 334; iii.124Rivo-Castiliano, ii. 92road, ii. 160rod, i. 122rombelow, with a, ii. 161ruinate, ii. 244run division, ii. 88running banquet, ii. 86rushes, rooms strewed with, iii.27Sabans, ii. 11Sackarson, iii.242St. Quentin, storming of, iii.224sakers, i. 152sarell, i. 58saunce, iii.127saying, ii. 44scald, i. 31scambled, ii. 16scenes, i. 215scholarism, i. 212schright, iii.275sciomancy, i. 218sect, ii. 28set, ii. 249Seven deadly Sins, i. 245shadow, ii. 175Shakespeare quoted, i. 16, 18, 25, 29, 31, 46, 92, 97, 167, 254, 266, 275; ii. 12, 16, 36, 37, 40, 41, 44, 60, 68, 84, 86, 99, 128, 142, 158, 193, 218, 228, 304, 326; iii.9,12,15,24,27,31,41,50,65,89,234shaver, ii. 45Shelley quoted, i. 155, 206shine, iii.106silverlings, ii. 11Skelton imitated, iii.59slick, i. 265slop, i. 230slubber, iii.65smell-feast, iii.239snicle, ii. 92soil, ii. 343sollars, ii. 76sometimes, ii. 31sonnet, i. 253sort, ii. 288souse, iii.264Spenser quoted inTamburlaine, i. 183. (I neglected to point out that in i. 173, "As when an herd of lusty Cymbrian bulls," &c., there is an imitation of a passage of theFaerie Queene, Book I. canto viii.—"As great a noyse, as when in Cymbrian plaineAn heard of Bulles, whom kindly rage doth stingDo for the milkie mothers want complaine,And fill the fields with troublous bellowing,The neighbour woods around with hollow murmur ring.")spials, i. 32sprung, iii.64staring up, hair, iii.89stated, ii. 39states, i. 14statua, i. 142stature, i. 74staves acre, i. 229stems, i. 24stern, ii. 365stomach, ii. 129stools on the stage, iii.215stoops, i. 169strain, i. 155subject, i. 203supprised, ii. 306sure, made, ii. 50sweating sickness, iii.224taint, i. 122take in, iii.239talents, i. 46tall, i. 167tanti, ii. 120taxing private, iii.213Theatre and Curtain playhouses, iii.218Theocritus imitated, iii.61thirling, iii.9tho, iii.107three for one, iii.240timeless, ii. 128tires, i. 47to, ii. 74tobacco, Bobadil's encomium of, iii.235tobacco smoked on the stage, iii.231topless, i. 275tottered, ii. 89toy, iii.86train, ii. 183trannels, iii.134Trier, i. 250true, true, ii. 127Turk of tenpence, ii. 84twigger, ii. 362Tyrone's insurrection, iii.244unresisted, ii. 339unvalued, i. 18ure, ii. 48vail, ii. 39valure, iii.80valurous, i. 20Vanity, Lady, ii. 45vaut, i. 23villainese, i. 95villainy, i. 52Vulcan's dancing, ii. 304wagers laid about actors, ii. 7wall'd in, ii. 304water-work at London Bridge, iii.217watery star, iii.9when? ii. 63when? can you tell? ii. 171while, i. 80whist, ii. 349Wigmore, ii. 162will, i. 136winter's tale, ii. 36Wordsworth, hisPower of Music, iii.238wreaks, iii.160Zoacum, i. 135

"As great a noyse, as when in Cymbrian plaineAn heard of Bulles, whom kindly rage doth stingDo for the milkie mothers want complaine,And fill the fields with troublous bellowing,The neighbour woods around with hollow murmur ring.")

"As great a noyse, as when in Cymbrian plaineAn heard of Bulles, whom kindly rage doth stingDo for the milkie mothers want complaine,And fill the fields with troublous bellowing,The neighbour woods around with hollow murmur ring.")

"As great a noyse, as when in Cymbrian plaine

An heard of Bulles, whom kindly rage doth sting

Do for the milkie mothers want complaine,

And fill the fields with troublous bellowing,

The neighbour woods around with hollow murmur ring.")

Transcriber's Notes.Page164In amicam, quod abortivum ipsa fecrrit. Typo for fecerit. Changed.Footnote350: Not in Islam. Typo for 'Isham' as elsewhere. Changed.Footnote381: So eds. B, C.--Islam. Typo for 'Isham'. Changed.Footnote462: In his close nips describde a gull to thee: Possible typo 'describde for described'. Unchanged.Page272Or, dropping-ripe, ready to fall with urin. Probable typo for ruin. Changed.Various u and v may be reversed. i and j may be reversed.The index applies to all three volumes. Links are applied for this volume only. These links usually apply to a footnote on the referenced page.Elegia V missing. Refer to footnote368.

Page164In amicam, quod abortivum ipsa fecrrit. Typo for fecerit. Changed.

Footnote350: Not in Islam. Typo for 'Isham' as elsewhere. Changed.

Footnote381: So eds. B, C.--Islam. Typo for 'Isham'. Changed.

Footnote462: In his close nips describde a gull to thee: Possible typo 'describde for described'. Unchanged.

Page272Or, dropping-ripe, ready to fall with urin. Probable typo for ruin. Changed.

Various u and v may be reversed. i and j may be reversed.

The index applies to all three volumes. Links are applied for this volume only. These links usually apply to a footnote on the referenced page.

Elegia V missing. Refer to footnote368.

PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO. EDINBURGH AND LONDON.


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