[38] [Edits., fool.]

[39] See note on p. 40.

[40] [Old copy, suffering.]

[41] [A MS. note in one of the former edits., refers us to the closet scene in "Hamlet.">[

[42] i.e., Embrace it. So again in this play—

"Here in this lodge they meet for damned clips."

i.e., cursed embraces.—Steevens.

[43] [Copies, you. This emendation was suggested by a MS. note in one of the former edits.]

[44] Alluding to the custom of hanging hats in ancient halls upon stags' horns.—Steevens.

[45] So in Lodge's "Wit's Miserie," p. 24: "What think you to a tender faire young, nay a weakling of womankind to wear whole Lordships and Manor-houses on her backe without sweating?" See also note to "The Miseries of Enforced Marriage," [ix. 490.]