[430] Sorry for you.
[431] [Edits., or, which is merely the old form of ere.]
[432] Mischievous, unlucky. So in "All's Well that Ends Well," act i. sc. 5—
"A shrewd knave and an unhappy."
See also Mr Steevens's note on "Henry VIII.," act i. sc. 4.
[433] I formerly was the mode of writing, as well as pronouncing, this word.
[434] ["The fine effect which is produced through the foregoing scenes by the idea of the 'Enforced Marriage' hanging on them like the German notion of Fate, is destroyed by this happy ending."—MS. note in one of the former edits.]
[435] [Bond.]
[436] [So in the ballad of "Auld Robin Gray"—
"My mother did na speak,
But she look'd me in the face," &c.