[164] [Old copy, When.]
[165] The old copy reads “to nurtue to be brought,” but it is probably a misprint.
[166] [Old copy, Exit, but all three leave the stage.]
[167] [The ordinary proverb runs, “Who sups,” &c.]
[168] [A sleepy-head or a stupid.]
[169] [For the future.]
[170] This allusion to the sweat, a word anciently used as synonymous with the plague, seems to fix the date, when “Appius and Virginia” was written, in 1563: according to Camden’s Annals, there was then “a raging plague in London.”
[171] [Old copy, Bayberry.]
[172] [Strown.]
[173] [Knowledge, perception.]