71 ([return])
[ familiars— i.e. attendant-demons.]
72 ([return])
[ their— So the later 4tos.—2to 1604 “my.”]
73 ([return])
[ slop— i.e. wide breeches.]
74 ([return])
[ vile— Old ed. “vild.” See note || p. 68.
[Note || from page 68 (The Second Part of Tamburlaine the
Great):
Vile— The 8vo “Vild”; the 4to “Wild” (Both eds. a little
before, have “VILE monster, born of some infernal hag”, and,
a few lines after, “To VILE and ignominious servitude”:—the
fact is, our early writers (or rather transcribers), with
their usual inconsistency of spelling, give now the one form,
and now the other: compare the folio SHAKESPEARE, 1623,
where we sometimes find “vild” and sometimes “VILE.”)]
75 ([return])
[ vestigiis nostris— All the 4tos “vestigias nostras.”]