[14] Different kinds of mummy were formerly used in medicine. "Mummie is become merchandise," says Sir Thomas Browne, "Mizraim cures wounds, and Pharaoh is sold for balsams." Urn-Burial.

[15] Open-work embroidery.

[16] A sounding (but not a flourish) of trumpets or other wind instruments.

[17] Coach. Fr. Carrosse.

[18] i.e. More feathers were not dislodged from the helmets of the combatants at the great tilting-match.—Steevens.

[19] Housings.

[20] It is hardly possible to mark with any certainty the stage-business of this play. Though Brachiano, who has just withdrawn into a "closet," appears again when Flamineo calls him (See p. [15]), it would seem that the audience were to imagine that a change of scene took place here to another apartment, as Flamineo says (p. [13]): "Sister, my lord attends you in the banqueting-house."—Dyce.

[21] Quarrel.

[22] i.e. Allow an adversary to aim in order to draw him on to continue playing.

[23] The jack at bowls.