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[ artier] i.e. artery. This form occurs again in the SEC. PART of the present play: so too in a copy of verses by Day;]
"Hid in the vaines and ARTIERS of the earthe."
SHAKESPEARE SOC. PAPERS, vol. i. 19.
The word indeed was variously written of old:
"The ARTER strynge is the conduyt of the lyfe spiryte."
Hormanni VULGARIA, sig. G iii. ed. 1530.
"Riche treasures serue for th'ARTERS of the war."
Lord Stirling's DARIUS, act ii. Sig. C 2. ed. 1604.
"Onelye the extrauagant ARTIRE of my arme is brused."
EVERIE WOMAN IN HER HUMOR, 1609, sig. D 4.
"And from the veines some bloud each ARTIRE draines."
Davies's MICROCOSMOS, 1611, p. 56.]
124 ([return])
[ regiment] i.e. rule.]
125 ([return])
[ fruit] So the 4to.—The 8vo "fruites.">[
126 ([return])
[ are] Old eds. "Is.">[