[16] Nares quotes from Taylor's Workes, 1630:—"So horseman-ship hath the trot, the amble, the racke, the pace, the false and wild gallop, or the full speed," &c.
[17] Street bullies, such as are introduced in Nabbes' Bride, Middleton and W. Rowley's Fair Quarrel, &c. The exploits of a "Roaring Girl" are admirably set forth by Dekker and Middleton.
[18] The full form "God refuse me" occurs in Webster's White Devil (ed. 1871, p. 7), where Dyce quotes from Taylor, the water poet: "Would so many else in their desperate madnes desire God to Damne them, to Renounce them, to Forsake them, to Confound them, to Sinke them, to Refuse them?" "Against Cursing and Swearing," Works, 1630.
[19] "The Saturday Night, some sixteen sail of the Hollanders, and about ten White Hall Men (who in England are called Colliers) were commanded to fight against the Castle of Punthal, standing three miles from Cadiz: who did so accordingly; and discharged in that service, at the least, 1,600 shot." Three to One, &c. (Arber's English Garner, I. 626).
[20] Sc. companions: Mids. Night's Dream, III., i.; Shirley's Wedding, k. v., &c.
[21] Middleton says somewhere (in A Fair Quarrel, I think):—
"The Infinity of Love
Holds no proportion with Arithmetick."
[22] To "look babies in the eyes" was a common expression for peering amorously into the eyes.
[23] Sc. fagot.
[24] "Barleybreake" (the innocent sport so gracefully described in the first book of the Arcadia) is often used in a wanton sense.