[30] "I bring the morning pictur'd in a cloud."—"Siege of Rhodes," part i. p. 10.
[31] "Mr. Comely in love."—"English Monsieur," p. 49.
[32] Sir William D'Avenant's play of "Love and Honour."
[33] "But honours says not so."—"Siege of Rhodes," part i. p. 19.
[34] "Love in a Nunnery," p. 34.
[35] Col. Henry Howard, son of Thomas, Earl of Berkshire, made a play called the "United Kingdoms," which began with a funeral; and had also two kings in it. This gave the duke a just occasion to set up two kings in Brentford, as it is generally believed; tho' others are of opinion, that his grace had our two brothers, King Charles and the Duke of York, in his thoughts. It was acted at the Cockpit, in Drury Lane, soon after the Restoration; but miscarrying on the stage, the author had the modesty not to print it; and therefore, the reader cannot reasonably expect any particular passages of it. Others say, that they are Boabdelin and Abdalla, the two contending kings of Granada; and Mr. Dryden has, in most of his serious plays, two contending kings of the same place.
[36] "Conquest of Granada," in two parts.
"On seas I bore thee, and on seas I died,
I died: and for a winding-sheet, a wave