[230] [Alluding to the "Three Ladies of London," 1584.]
[231] [Old copy, Pompe hath.]
[232] [Old copy, place.]
[233] [The bells attached to the falcon, the impress of Pleasure.]
[234] Referring to the chains of gold formerly worn by persons of rank and property.
[235] Alluding to the manner in which ballad-sellers of that day used to expose their goods, by hanging them up in the same way that the three lords had hung up their shields.
[236] [Foolish, maudlin.]
[237] [Except.]
[238] [See Hazlitt's "Proverbs," 1869, p. 265-6.]
[239] The best, and indeed what may be considered the only, account of Tarlton the actor precedes the edition of his Jests, reprinted for the Shakespeare Society in 1844.