[135] i.e. For love’s sake.
[136] Bet.
[137] Hands.
[138] The shopkeeper’s common cry at this period.
[139] An exclamation of contempt, equivalent to “a fig for.”—Dyce.
[140] Proverbial term for a simpleton.
[141] Milksop.
[142] Beat.
[143] Thieves’ slang for a man who shams madness to gain his ends. Compare Dekker’s Bellman of London, Grosart, sc. III., p. 101.
[144] i.e. Not fully dressed.