In all her words, unto all hearers fit,
You may at Revels, you at Counsaile, sit.
And again, Elegie XVIII: Loves Progresse:
So we her ayres contemplate, words and heart,
And virtues.
l. 28. Frame and enamell Plate. Compare: 'And therefore they that thinke to gild and enamell deceit, and falsehood, with the additions of good deceit, good falshood, before they will make deceit good, will make God bad.' Sermons 80. 73. 742. 'Frame' means, of course, 'shape, fashion', and 'plate' gold or silver service. The elaborate enamelling of such dishes and cups was, I presume, as common as in the case of gold watches and clocks. See F. J. Britten's Old Clocks and Watches and their Makers, 1904.
Page 90. Elegie VIII.
l. 2. Muskats, i.e. 'Musk-cats.' The 'muskets' of 1669 is only a misprint.
ll. 5-6. In these lines as they stand in the editions and most of the MSS. there is clearly something wrong: