[331] [In the old copy, aloof of.]
[332] ["A dwarfe, dandiprat, little-skipjacke."—Cotgrave.]
[333] [Can or con thee thank, give thee thanks—a common expression.]
[334] [Nature.]
[335] [Fault.]
[336] [A tolerably early example of the use of this saying, which may have taken its rise from the custom of having a pudding as the first dish on the table, and may consequently be equivalent to betimes.]
[337] [Clownish or rude, like a cobbler, from souter, a cobbler.]
[338] [A word of somewhat uncertain meaning and of obscure origin. See Halliwell v. Liripoops.]
[339] [This is an allusion worth noting; the editor does not recollect to have met with it before.]
[340] [The two places chiefly used for executions, after the discontinuance of the Elms in Smithfield.]