I think I have made the cullion to wring.
I was not beaten so black and blew,
But I am sure he has as many new."
In "Wily Beguiled:" "But to say the truth, she had little reason to take a cullion lug loaf, milksop slave, when she may have a lawyer, a gentleman that stands upon his reputation in the country;" in Massinger's "Guardian," act. ii., sc. 4—
"Love live Severino,
And perish all such cullions as repine
At his new monarchy."
And Bobadil, in Ben Jonson's "Every Man to his Humour," act. iii., sc. 5, when beating Cob, exclaims:
"You base cullion, you."
[295] [Original, Dylde; the compositor having repeated the d of God at the beginning of the following word. This is not an uncommon misprint.]