[309] 1 Oldcastle, II. i. 522, 632.

[310] Cf. p. 67, n. 1.

[311] K. to K. Honest Man, sc. v. 396, 408, 519, 559; sc. vii. 662, 738, 828, 894; sc. xv. 1385, 1425, 1428; cf. Graves, 65.

[312] Cf. pp. 25, 33.

[313] George a Greene, sc. xi. 1009, ‘Wil you go to the townes end.... Now we are at the townes end’.

[314] A. of Feversham, III. vi. 55, ‘See Ye ouertake vs ere we come to Raynum down’.... (91) ‘Come, we are almost now at Raynum downe’.

[315] Dr. Faustus, 1110, ‘let vs Make haste to Wertenberge ... til I am past this faire and pleasant greene, ile walke on foote’, followed immediately by ‘Enter a Horse-courser’ to Faustus, evidently in his ‘chaire’ (1149) at Wittenberg.

[316] R. J. I. iv. 113, where, in Q1, Romeo’s ‘on lustie Gentlemen’ to the maskers is followed by ‘Enter old Capulet with the Ladies’, while in Q2, Benvolio responds ‘Strike drum’, and then ‘They march about the Stage, and Seruingmen come forth with Napkins’, prepare the hall, and ‘Exeunt’, when ‘Enter all the guests and gentlewomen to the Maskers’.

[317] In T. of The Shrew, V. i. 17, ‘Pedant lookes out of the window’, while the presenters are presumably occupying the gallery, but even if this is a sixteenth-century s.d., the window need not be an upper one.

[318] The s.d. to Sp. Trag. III. xi. 8, where ‘He goeth in at one doore and comes out at another’, is rather obscure, but the doors are probably those of a house which has just been under discussion, and if so, more than one door was sometimes supposed to belong to the same house.