[448] i.e., Swoon.

[449] Second edit., fauours.

[450] So read for the metre. Old copies, here's.

[451] See also Collier's "Hist. of Eng. Dramatic Poetry," i. 3.

[452] See Dyce's "Shakespeare," 1868, ii. 2.

[453] Not in the old copy.

[454] [i.e., to Tyburn.]

[455] [Old copy, thee.]

[456] Old copy, well a neere. Well-a-year is an unusual phrase, well being corrupted from wail. "Well-a-day" in the same sense is common enough.

[457] Old copy, otimie, I conjecture otomy for anatomy, a common form of anatomy.