Sc. 3.
"A gentler judgement vanish'd from his lips."
I have never met with any sense of 'vanish' but its ordinary one, which certainly will not suit here. We should therefore, I think, read issued, or some word of similar meaning. It is curious that Massinger seems to have taken 'vanish'd' on Shakespeare's authority. "Upon those lips from which those sweet words vanish'd" (Reneg. v. 5). We have, however, in Lucrece:—
"To make more vent for passage of her breath,
Which thronging through her lips, so vanisheth
As smoke from Ætna, that in air consumes."
But the breath is material.
"Taking thy part he rush'd aside the law."