"Detraction he scorns, honours the best: Tanti for hate, thus low for all the rest."

[ [166] So Dyce.—4tos. "fanne."

[ [167] Mr. Tancock quotes from Pliny's Natural History:—"Hystrici longiores aculei et cum intendit cutem missiles. Ora urgentium figit canum et paulo longius jaculatur."

[ [168] So the 4tos.—Dyce reads "sylvan."

[ [169] The name of a rustic dance.

[ [170] So the 4tos.—Dyce reads "shall."

[ [171] The 4tos. read, "My lord, here comes the king and the nobles." Dyce gives, "Here comes my lord the king and the nobles." Mr. Fleay arranges the passage thus:—

"Here comes my lord The king and th' nobles from the parliament. I'll stand aside."

[ [172] Equivalent to a dissyllable.

[ [173] Cf. 3 Henry VI. v. 6, "aspiring blood of Lancaster."