[185] [Edit., fear'd.]
[186] In Surphlet's "Discourses on the Diseases of Melancholy," 4to, 1599, p. 102, the case alluded to is set down: "There was also of late a great lord, which thought himselfe to be a glasse, and had not his imagination troubled, otherwise then in this onely thing, for he could speake mervailouslie well of any other thing: he used commonly to sit, and tooke great delight that his friends should come and see him, but so as that he would desire them, that they would not come neere unto him."
[187] Hitherto misprinted conclaves.—Collier. [First 4to, correctly, concaves.]
[188] See Surphlet, p. 102.
[189] [An allusion to the myth of the werewolf.]
[190] [This proverb is cited by Heywood. See Hazlitt's "Proverbs," 1869, p. 392.]
[191] [All the editions except 1657, bidden, and all have arms for harms.]
[192] Presently, forthwith.
[193] [Edits., wax.]
[194] Some of the old copies [including that of 1607] read—