p. 203, l. 27 Then then. All previous editions read ‘Then thou’ which makes no sense. The emendation, if not what Mrs. Behn wrote, is at least grammatical.
p. 204, l. 34 this St. Martin’s Trumpery. 1724 ‘these’.
p. 205, l. 4 my Girl. 1724 omits ‘my’.
p. 206, l. 28 of the World. 1724 ‘of the whole World’.
p. 207, l. 30 beholding. 1724 ‘beholden’.
p. 207, l. 36 Aside. 1724 omits.
p. 209, l. 2 look, look how. 1724 ‘look, how’.
p. 209, l. 12 Exeunt. I have supplied this, which does not occur in previous editions. 4to 1687 has ‘The End of the First Act.’ 1724 gives nothing.
p. 210, l. 3 Livings. 1724 ‘Living’.
p. 216, l. 13 Enter Bellmour. I have placed this entrance here as by his first speech Bellmour obviously overhears Leticia’s words, ‘Blest be this kind Retreat’. 1724 places the entrance after ‘Sighs and Tears.’ 4to 1687 gives it in a bracket by Leticia’s three lines.