[95] [In the original, D. Doughty is made to go out.]
[96] [Perhaps a sort of allusion to the proverb, To go to Rome with a mortar on one's head.]
[97] A Lombard's touchstone, to try gold and silver. See "Richard III.," act iv., sc. 2.—Cooper.
[98] A proverbial expression, relating to a still common practice.—Cooper.
[99] Tib and Annot would seem to enter here.—Cooper.
[100] A fit usually means the division of a ballad, but here it is to be understood as a song.—Cooper.
[101] i.e., Abide the consequences, rue, or suffer for. See "A Midsummer Night's Dream," act iii., sc. 2.—Cooper.
[102] Truepenny goes out here, but the old copy omits his exit.—Cooper.
[103] [Original, her.]
[104] [Shield.]