[116] Misprinted 'countrey shall': Qu—country-Hall, as above? Isham 'country Hall.' G.
[117] Dunged. D.
[118] Isham badly 'forsake.' G.
[119] Plowden. D.
[120] Harry Hunkes and Sacarson were two bears at Paris-garden: the latter was the more famous, and is mentioned by Shakespeare in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Act I., sc. 1. D. Isham 'Sakersone.' G.
[121] Daniel, I believe: [Malone's Manuscript note in Bodlean copy. See Epigram 30. G.] Mr. Dyce adds here, "I am sorry to believe that by Dacus (who is spoken of with great contempt in Epigram xxx.) our author means Samuel Daniel: but the following lines in that very pleasing writer's Complaint of Rosamond (which was first printed in 1592) certainly would seem to be alluded to here,
"Ah beauty syren, faire enchanting good,
Sweet, silent rhetorique of perswading eyes,
Dumb eloquence, whose power doth moue the blood
More then the words or wisdom of the wise, &c.
1611, p. 39,—Daniel's Certaine Small Works, &c. 1611.") G.
[122] See note on this under Epigram 43. G.
[123] Isham 'Pease.' G.