"A devil in an everlasting garment hath him."
There is something evidently lost here, riming with 'steel.' It may have been by the heels, or laid by the heels, alluding to 'Tartar Limbo'; but still, or at his will, seems preferable.
"A fiend, a fairy, pitiless and rough."
For 'fairy' Theobald proposed fury, and we have "O, my good lord, deliver me from these furies" (i.e. bailiffs).—Massinger, Fatal Dowry, v. 1. "Fiends, fairies, hags that fight in beds of steel."—Peel, Battle of Aleazar, where Mr. Dyce reads furies. In Jonson's Poetaster (iii. 1) the Lictors are termed furies.
Sc. 3.
"Master, if you do, expect spoon-meat, or bespeak a long spoon."
For 'or' we should read and, as usual. Mr. Dyce reads so.