to blue

Mrs. D. »What have you done—blued the lot

Mr. D. »Belinda, your vulgar expressions pain me.» (The Prude’s Progr. 37. 2.)

To blue means here: to spend, to get rid of money quickly.

Have you blued the lot? = have you spent all the money?

Cf. to be blued = to be robbed.

boss-eyed

»You boss-eyed old cow, you.» (Stage-Land. 58. 22.)

Uneducated young man.

Boss-eyed means squint-eyed or with one eye injured. Here it is probably the former, the expression alluding to a woman.