The Works of John Marston. Volume 2
John Marston
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  • Naples’ canker, iii. 309;
    • Naples’ pestilence, ii. [349]
  • Nashe, Thomas, quoted, iii. 48, 225, 273
  • Natalis Comes, iii. 270
  • Neast (nest) of goblets, ii. [7]
  • Nectar-skink, ii. [307]
  • Ne’er-crazed, iii. 355
  • Nemis, iii. 289
  • Nile, dogs drinking on the bank of, ii. [281]
  • Nitty, iii. 276, 370
  • No point, ii. [77]
  • Noddy, iii. 189
  • Noise, ii. [43]
  • Nuzzel, ii. [372]
  • O God, i. 32
  • O hone, hone, iii. 98
  • O Lord, sir, ii. [30]
  • Obligation, ii. [57]
  • Occupant, iii. 300, 349
  • Occupation, ii. [219]
  • O’er-peise, i. 310
  • Old cut (= old fashion), i. 11
  • One and thirty, iii. 329
  • Ophelia, iii. 52
  • Ophiogeni, iii. 310
  • Outrecuidance, iii. 95
  • Owe, ii. [259]
  • Ox-pith, i. 239
  • Packstaff epithets, iii. 338;
    • packstaff rhymes, iii. 310
  • Pages, their fondness for dicing, ii. [382]
  • Paize, i. 100, 121; ii. [327]
  • Palæphatus, iii. 311
  • Pale, ii. [287]
  • Palladium, ii. [252]
  • Palmerin de Oliva, ii. [69]
  • Pane, ii. [337]; iii. 349
  • Pantable, pantofle, i. 29; ii. [382]
  • Parcel-gilt, ii. [57]
  • Parkets, ii. [141]
  • Parmeno (“nothing ad Parmenonis suem”), i. 204
  • Parted, iii. 20
  • Parthenophil, iii. 358
  • Party per pale, ii. [345]
  • Passion, i. 90
  • Pavin, iii. 340
  • Peat, ii. [339]; iii. 100
  • Peele, Gronge, Merry Jests of, i. 40
  • Peevish, iii. 254
  • Peggy’s complaint for the death of her Willy, ii. [29]
  • Pepper in the nose, ii. [321]
  • Peregal, i. 55
  • Perfumed jerkin, i. 314
  • Perpetuana, ii. [343]
  • Persius quoted, ii. [111]
  • Peterman, iii. 38
  • Petronel, i. 19
  • Physic against Fortune, i. 255
  • Pickhatch, iii. 319, 376
  • Pill (= peel), i. 99
  • Pillowbear, iii. 253
  • Pin and the web, iii. 423
  • Pirates hanged at Wapping, iii. 91
  • Pistol, Ancient (scraps of his rant), iii. 11
  • Placket, ii. [383]
  • Plastic, i. 234
  • Plat, i. 54
  • Play-bills stuck on posts, iii. 302
  • Plunge, i. 105
  • Plutarch quoted, ii. [152], [266]
  • Pole-head, ii. [348]
  • Pomander, i. 294
  • Pommado reversa, iii. 375
  • Pompey the huge, i. 214
  • Ponado, iii. 42
  • Poor John, i. 89
  • Popeling, iii. 262
  • Porcpisce, iii. 69
  • Port Esquiline, iii. 351, 361
  • Possessed persons able to speak in various tongues, i. 212
  • Poting-stick, i. 308
  • Prest, ii. [250]; iii. 312
  • Priapus’ gardens, iii. 302
  • Proface, iii. 303
  • Prostitution (= whore), ii. [13]
  • Protest (use of the word considered affected), ii. [345]
  • Pudding tobacco, ii. [344]
  • Pug, i. 29, 152
  • Puisne, iii. 300
  • Purchase, i. 303; ii. [410]
  • Purfled, i. 110
  • Puritan (cant term for a whore), ii. [383]
  • Puritans’ ruffs, i. 13
  • Put-pin, iii. 362
  • Putry, i. 150
  • Quelquechose, i. 216
  • Quiblin, iii. 60
  • Quote, ii. [364]
  • Ramp, i. 99
  • Ramsey, Lady, iii. 87
  • Rariety, iii. 213
  • Rats of Nilus, iii. 342, 344
  • Real (= regal), i. 34
  • Reason (raisin), iii. 154
  • Rebato, i. 31; iii. 351
  • Red lattice, i. 86
  • Reez’d bacon, iii. 322
  • Remora, iii. 84
  • Remorse, i. 21, 90
  • Renowmed, ii. [165]
  • Respective (= respectful), i. 152
  • Reverent (= reverend), ii. [292]; iii. 29, &c.
  • Rhinoceros’ horn, iii. 139
  • Ribanded ears, ii. [391]; iii. 301
  • Richard II., quoted, i. 28;
    • imitation of passage from, iii. 146
  • Richard III., quoted, i. 47, 48; ii. [349]; iii. 344
  • Ride at the ring, i. 214
  • Riding-wand, iii. 38
  • Rings with death’s head, ii. [16]
  • Ringo-root, iii. 348
  • Rivels (= wrinkles), i. 243;
    • rivell’d, i. 108; iii. 234
  • Rivo, ii. [349], [355]
  • Roast beef (a “commodity”), iii. 40
  • Rochelle churchman, i. 252
  • Rodio, iii. 267
  • Room, i. 202, 206
  • Romeo and Juliet performed at the Curtain Theatre, iii. 373;
    • early popularity of, iii. 140
  • Rope-maker’s son, ii. [153]
  • Rosa solis, ii. [45]
  • Rosemary, iii. 53, 138
  • Rosicleer, i. 30, 300
  • Ruff, iii. 182
  • Ruffled boot, i. 83
  • Rug-gowns, ii. [395]
  • Rutter, ii. [386]
  • Sacramental wine poisoned, iii. 241
  • Sad, sadly, sadness, i. 71; iii. 258, 339
  • St. Agnes’ Eve, iii. 141
  • Salaminian, iii. 261
  • Say (“take say”), ii. [11]
  • Sconce, i. 236; iii. 84
  • Scotch barnacle, i. 256;
    • Scotch boot, i. 257;
    • Scotch farthingale, iii. 16
  • Scots, satirised in Eastward Ho! iii. 64
  • Seneca quoted, i. 20, 49, 122, 127, 130, 133, 141, 144-5, 149, 174, 237, 265, 304; ii. [109]
  • Servant (= suitor, lover), i. 33; ii. [388]
  • Sest, ii. [374], [402]
  • Sewer, ii. [135]
  • Shakespeare, imitated, i. 28, 47, 48, 224; ii. [23], [143], [218]; iii. 133, 134, 137, 146, 215, 219, 230;
    • burlesqued, i. 206; ii. [349]; iii. 344
  • Shaking of the sheets, iii. 165
  • Shale, ii. [185]
  • Ship of Fools, ii. [122]
  • Shirley, James, iii. 344
  • Shot-clog, iii. 13
  • Si quis, ii. [304]
  • Sick Man’s Salve, iii. 107
  • Siddow, i. 162
  • Silver piss-pots, iii. 316
  • Sink a-pace (cinquepace), iii. 156
  • Sinking thought, i. 106
  • Sinklo, the actor, i. 200
  • Sip a kiss, i. 91
  • Slatted, i. 281
  • Sliftred, i. 27
  • Slip, i. 81, 111
  • Slop, i. 83
  • Sluice (“sluiced out his life-blood”), i. 189; iii. 224
  • Slur, iii. 371
  • Sly, William, i. 199
  • Small, ii. [361]
  • Snaphance, iii. 269, 330
  • Snib, i. 264; ii. [353]; iii. 379
  • Snout-fair, iii. 320
  • Snurling, i. 186
  • Soil (“take soil”), i. 254
  • Soldado, iii. 261, 357
  • Sometimes, iii. 282
  • Sophocles’ Antigone quoted, i. 128
  • Souse, i. 279
  • Southwell, Robert, iii. 281
  • Spanish blocks, iii. 301
  • Spanish leather, ii. [7]
  • Spanish Tragedy, i. 121, 168; iii. 12, 26, 28
  • Speak pure fool, i. 85
  • Speeding-place, ii. [333]
  • Spiders eaten by monkeys, i. 213
  • Spur-royals, i. 109
  • Spurs (jingling spurs affected by gallants), i. 233
  • Squibs running on lines, ii. [121]
  • Stabb’d arms, ii. [70]
  • Stage, custom of gallants to sit (and smoke) on the, i. 199, 200, 206
  • Stalking-horse, i. 283
  • Stammel, ii. [387]; iii. 14
  • State (= throne), i. 36; ii. [215]
  • States (= nobles), i. 109, 159, 162
  • Statist, ii. [262]
  • Statute-staple, iii. 322
  • Stigmatic, iii. 359
  • Stock (= stoccata), i. 111, 239
  • Stockado, iii. 268
  • Stone-bows, ii. [8]
  • Streak, iii. 323, 355
  • Stut, ii. [342]
  • Suburbs (bawdy-houses in), i. 317
  • Suffenus, iii. 306
  • Surphule, i. 245; iii. 275, 310
  • Surquedry, i. 50, 147; iii. 267
  • Switzer, iii. 348
  • Swound, ii. [93]
  • Sylvester, Joshua, iii. 281
  • Tacitus, his remarks on prohibited books, ii. [48]
  • Take say, ii. [11]
  • Take the whiff, ii. [353]
  • Take up commodities, ii. [340]; iii. 365
  • Tamburlaine, iii. 25
  • Tanakin, ii. [13]
  • Taw, ii. [376]
  • Tereus, iii. 266
  • Termagant, iii. 240
  • There goes but a pair of shears betwixt, i. 290
  • Thou’st (= thou must), i. 283
  • Thristing, ii. [413]
  • Thunder, eels roused from the mud by, iii. 347
  • Thus while she sleeps I sorrow for her sake, iii. 14
  • Thwack a jerkin, ii. [405]
  • Toderers, i. 210
  • Too too, ii. [328]; iii. 313
  • Totter’d, ii. [373]
  • Touch (= perception), i. 105
  • Toy to mock an ape withal, iii. 362
  • Tradesmen’s wives used as lures to attract customers, ii. [60]; iii. 266, 325
  • Tragœdia cothurnata, i. 140
  • Travellers, affected solemnity of, i. 12; iii. 274
  • Traverse, iii. 394
  • Trenchmore, iii. 272
  • Tretably, ii. [358]
  • Trick of twenty, i. 276; ii. [54]
  • Trot the ring, i. 111, 142; iii. 378
  • Trow (= think you?), iii. 74
  • Trunk, iii. 31
  • Trunk-sleeves, ii. [184]
  • Truss my hose, i. 10
  • Tubrio, iii. 273
  • Tumbrel, iii. 262, 346
  • Turnmill Street, ii. [16]
  • Turn-spit dog bound to his wheel, iii. 41
  • Tweer, i. 71
  • Twelve-penny room, i. 202
  • Twinest (= embraces), i. 117
  • Twopenny ward, iii. 106
  • Ulysses, his counterfeited madness, iii. 15
  • Unheal, i. 243
  • Unnookt simplicity, i. 163
  • Unpaiz’d, i. 144
  • Unperegall, ii. [85]
  • Unshale, i. 215
  • Upbraid, iii. 379
  • Ure, iii. 312, 329
  • Vaunt-guard, iii. 261
  • Vaut, ii. [288]
  • Velure, i. 79
  • Via, ii. [20], [43], [133]
  • Vie, iii. 84
  • Vin de monte, ii. [140]
  • Vincentio Saviolo, iii. 373
  • Violets, bridal-beds strewn with, ii. [373]
  • Virgil imitated, i. 113
  • Virginia, early settlers in, iii. 63
  • Virgins, popularly supposed to have the right to save the lives of criminals, iii. 190
  • Virtue, ii. [247]
  • Vively, ii. [293]
  • Voluntaries, iii. 261
  • Wall-eyed, iii. 133
  • Wandering whore, iii. 377
  • Wards, treatment of, iii. 314
  • Wedlock (= wife), ii. [143]; iii. 47
  • Weeping Cross, iii. 85
  • Welshmen’s pride in their gentility, i. 258
  • Westward Ho! comedy of, iii. 5
  • Westward Ho! (i.e., to Tyburn), iii. 27
  • Wet finger (“with a wet finger”), ii. [189]
  • What could I do withal? ii. [214]
  • When (exclamation of impatience) i. 241; ii. [348], &c.
  • When Arthur first in Court began, i. 240
  • When Sampson was a tall young man, iii. 32
  • Whiblin, iii. 168
  • Whiff, take the, ii. [353]
  • Who calls Jeronimo? iii. 12
  • Who cries out murther? Lady, was it you? iii. 26
  • Wighy, i. 56
  • Will (= command), i. 125, ii. [305]
  • Willow garland, ii. [336]
  • Wimble, i. 58
  • Wisards (wise men), i. 159; iii. 335
  • With a wanion, iii. 53
  • Witches turned into cats, ii. [203]
  • Without a man (i.e., outside of man’s sense), ii. [294]
  • Wolt, i. 27
  • Wood, ii. [253]
  • Woodstock’s work, iii. 276
  • Woollen caps, ii. [60]
  • Word (= motto), i. 77, 84; iii. 155
  • Wounds of a murdered man supposed to bleed in the presence of the murderer, iii. 224
  • Wrapt up in the tail of his mother’s smock, ii. [407]
  • Wrinkles, vulgar belief concerning, iii. 135
  • Writhled, iii. 326
  • Wrought shirt, i. 79