[133] Old copy, my.
[134] Old copy, But, which would seem to convey the exact reverse of what Phizanties intends—that he did not know Hermione's birth, but, presuming him to be of obscure birth, did not wish him to marry Fidelia.
[135] Old copy, But.
[136] Old copy, end.
[137] [Evidently a proverbial expression, of which the import can only be obscurely gathered from the context. Nock is the same, of course, as hock.]
[138] [There was a second edition, presenting considerable variations, generally for the better, in 1592. See Hazlitt's "Handbook," 1867, p. 466.]
[139] [For stuff the edit, of 1592 substitutes wares.]
[140] This division is omitted in the edition of 1592, and it seems unnecessary.
[141] [Old copy, his.]
[142] [Sweetheart, mistress.]