[7] A play on words: (1) case; (2) kaze (= pudendum muliebre).
[8] Compare the witticism of Julia, daughter of Augustus, in Macrobius (Saturn., ii. 5).
[9] Ed. 2. “you.”
[10] Old eds. “quite” and “quit.”
[11] For an account of the religious sect called The Family of Love, see Middleton, iii. 3-5.
[12] Halliwell (Dict. of Arch. and Prov. Words) quotes from Armin’s Nest of Ninnies:—“Out she would, tucks up her trinkets, like a Dutch tannikin sliding to market on the ice, and away she flings.”
[13] Woman (Dutch).
[14] Whore. (The word brothel was so used).—Cf. Middleton, i. 269: “I may grace her with the name of a courtezan, a backslider, a prostitution,” &c.
SCENE II.
A Brothel.