"He is no fool for fancy as you would have it to appear he is."
For 'fool' we should perhaps read food.
"She shall be buried with her face upwards."
That is, like everybody else. Theobald read heels for face, quoting,
"Whilst I have meat and drink love cannot starve me;
For if I die of the first fit I am unhappy,
And worthy to be buried with my heels upward;"
(Fletcher, Wild-goose Chase, i. 3)
while Mason proposed feet. But Singer says, referring to Winter's Tale, iv. 3, that the meaning is, she shall be buried in her lover's arms; and I think there is a waggish allusion to nuptial joys.