[241] In the old copy, this and the following line are transposed, and some of the speeches are wrongly addressed.
[242] Old copy, in.
[243] Old copy, none.
[244] Old copy, hanged.
[245] Old copy, neder.
[246] Old copy, ever.
[247] Swoon.
[248] See Hazlitt's "Popular Poetry," iv. 239. The term goldylocks, curiously enough, seems to have been in early use in a contemptuous or bad sense.
[249] Old copy, bid.
[250] Old copy, exhorting.