[329] If.
[330] "Twelve years since" (Tempest).—Halliwell.
[331] A provincialism.—Halliwell. [Rather, perhaps, a Cockneyism.]
[332] A term of contempt for a fool. See "Much Ado about Nothing," iii. 3.—Halliwell.
[333] "At a pin's fee" (Hamlet).—Halliwell.
[334] Anger. "And that which spites me more than all these wants" (Taming of the Shrew).—Halliwell.
[335] To look sad. This term is often incorrectly explained. "Fye, how impatience lowreth in your face" (Com. Err.), i.e., makes your face look sad, opposed to the "merry look."—Halliwell. [Lour is simply a contracted form of lower.]
[336] Care.
[337] Compare "Merchant of Venice," iii. 4.—Halliwell.
[338] Not a term of reproach.—Compare "1 Henry VI."—Halliwell.