And in his "Bartholomew Fair," act ii. sc. 2: "Froth your cans well i' the filling, at length, rogue, and jog your bottles o' the buttock, sirrah; then skink out the first glass ever, and drink with all companies."
[455] Suspicion.
[456] [Be in accord with reason.]
[457] [Old copy, call'st.]
[458] Similar to this description is one in Marlowe's "Edward II.," act i.
[459] Old copy, are.
[460] [Old copy, knew.]
[461] See note to "Cornelia" [v. 188].
[462] In Shakespeare's "Coriolanus," Sicinius asks Volumnia, "Are you mankind?" On which Dr Johnson remarks that "a mankind woman is a woman with the roughness of a man; and, in an aggravated sense, a woman ferocious, violent, and eager to shed blood." Mr Upton says mankind means wicked. See his "Remarks on Ben Jonson," p. 92. The word is frequently used to signify masculine. So in [Beaumont and Fletcher's] "Love's Cure; or, The Martial Maid," act iv. sc. 2—
"From me all mankind women learn to woo."