[220] That omitted, ditto.
[221] Your, 1618, '23, '33.
[222] Distracted. So in "Jack Drum's Entertainment," 1601, ed. 1616, sig. G 3—
"Alas! kind youth, how came he thus distraught?"
And—
"Alas! my son's distraught. Sweet boy, appease
Thy unstirring affections."
—"Second Part of Antonio and Mellida," iii. 2.
Again, in Lyly's "Euphues and his England"—
"Iffida is distraught of her wits."
[223] To burn daylight was a proverbial phrase for doing anything in waste or with no advantage. See "Merry Wives of Windsor," ii. 1, and "Romeo and Juliet," i. 4. So in Churchyard's "Worthiness of Wales," p. 96, edit. 1776—