[45] glad.
[46] alehouse sign.
[47] The reader is warned against chronological confusion. In order to follow out the various dramatic contributions of the Interludes one must sometimes pass over plays at one point to return to them at another. Care has been taken to place approximate dates against the plays, and these should be duly regarded. The treatment of so early an Interlude writer as Heywood (his three best known productions may be dated between 1520 and 1540) thus late is justified by the fact that he is in some ways 'before his time', notably in his rejection of the Morality abstractions.
[48] sweet.
[49] boasting.
[50] I am.
[51] counsel.
[52] Oedipus Tyrannus (Lewis Campbell's translation).
[53] In Damon and Pythias, see p. 117 above.
[54] ready.