[401] [Edits., to.]
[402] [Booty, earnings.]
[403] This is a corruption of the Italian corragio! courage! a hortatory exclamation. So, in the Epilogue to "Albumazer," 1615—
Two hundred crowns? and twenty pound a year
For three good lives? cargo! hai, Trincalo!"
—Steevens.
[404] A Fr. G. Cigue, utr. a Lat. Cucuta.—Skinner.
Cigue f. Hemlocke, Homlocke, hearbe Bennet, Kex.—Cotgrave.
[405] Dry-meat is inserted from the copy of 1611.—Collier.
[406] Heir and heiress were formerly confounded in the same way as prince was applied to both male and female. So in Cyril Tourneur's "Atheist's Tragedy," 1612, we have—
This Castabella is a wealthy heire."