[45] [He quotes a passage from the "First Part of Hieronimo," 1605.]

[46] [Former edit., And.]

[47] [i.e., The left remnant of thy days.]

[48] [Former edit., unto.]

[49] ["This strange jumble (which it seems was acted with applause) may be taken as the most singular specimen extant of the serious mock-heroic. There is nothing in "The Tailors" itself so ludicrous as the serious parts in which the tailors appear. Nevertheless there are a few happy passages in the play."—MS. note in a copy of the former edit.]

LUST'S DOMINION

[50] "History of English Dram. Poetry," iii. p. 97.

[51] The curtain in front of the old theatres divided in the middle, and was drawn to the sides; but it may save further explanation to add here that, "beside the principal curtain, they sometimes used others as substitutes for scenes."—Malone.

[52] [Former edit., sick, heavy, and.]

[53] [Old copy, I'll lay there away.]