[ [293] Scene: the Abbey of Neath, Glamorganshire.
[ [294] So ed. 1598.—Omitted in ed. 1612. (Ed. 1622 "thy.")
[ [295] So eds. 1598, 1612.—Ed. 1622 " with sore" (and so Dyce.)
[ [296] So eds. 1612, 1622.—Ed. 1598 "open."
[ [297] Seneca Thyestes, 613.
[ [298] Old form of "yearns."
[ [299] So old eds. The repetition of "and these" in the next line is certainly suspicious. Dyce proposed
"For friends hath hapless Edward none but these, And these must die," &c.
Mr. Fleay's suggestion that "these and these" are "the 'hags' and 'Spencer and Baldock,'" seems very questionable.
[ [300] Mr. Fleay prints this speech as verse: