[381] The 4o has it all-afflicted wrath.—Collier.
[382] The old copy has it portion, which is most likely wrong.—Collier.
[383] Old copy, had.
[384] i.e., One of those inexplicable dumb shows ridiculed by "Hamlet." See edition of Shakespeare 1778, x. p. 284.—Steevens.
[385] Alluding to the use of it in Cooke's "City Gallant," commonly called "Green's Tu quoque," printed in the present volume.
[386] i.e., Whipped me.
[387] The 4o reads His.
[388] The 4o has it literally thus—
"To taste a vale of death in wicked livers,"
which Mr Reed altered to cast a veil, &c.; but ought we not rather to read—