[ [349] Untimely.

[ [350] Scene: an apartment in a house near the Louvre.

[ [351] "About noone, when he [the Admiral] was in returning home from the Counsell, with a greate companie of noblemen and gentlemen, beholde a harquebuzier out of a window of a house neere adjoyning shot the Admiral with two bullets of lead through both the arms.... The name of him that shot was very diligently kept secret. Some, saye it was Manrevet, which in the third Civill War traitorously slew his Captaine, Monsieur de Mony, a most valiant and noble gentleman, and straightway fled into the enemie's campe. Some say it was Bondot, one of the archers of the king's guard."—The Three Partes of Commentaries containing the whole and perfect discourse of the Civill Wars of France, &c. 1574 (Book x.).

[ [352] Crowns.

[ [353] This word occurs in 3 Henry VI., v. 1, and Titus Andronicus, v. 3; also in Shakespeare's Sonnets and Rape of Lucrece.

[ [354] Dwell. (In this sense the word "keep" is still used at Cambridge.)

[ [355] Old ed. "Nauarre, Nauarre."

[ [356] So old ed.—Dyce reads, "That those which do behold them."

[ [357] Scene: a street.

[ [358] Cunningham arranges ll. 34-5 thus: