14. [Sweet water.] Perfumed water. Cf. T.A. ii. 4. 6: "call for sweet water;" and see quotation in note on iv. 5. 75 above.

20. [Cross.] Thwart, interfere with. Cf. iv. 5. 91 above.

21. [Muffle.] Cover, hide. Cf. i. 1. 168 above; and see J.C. iii. 2. 191, etc. Steevens intimates that it was "a low word" in his day; but, if so, it has since regained its poetical character. Tennyson uses it repeatedly; as in The Talking Oak: "O, muffle round thy knees with fern;" The Princess: "A full sea glazed with muffled moonlight;" In Memoriam: "muffled round with woe," etc. Milton has unmuffle in Comus, 321: "Unmuffle, ye faint stars."

32. [Dear.] See on v. 2. 19 above.

33. [Jealous.] Suspicious; as in Lear, v. 1. 56, J.C. i. 2. 71, etc.

34. [In.] Into. See on v. 1. 36 above.

37. [Savage-wild.] Cf. ii. 2. 141 above.

39. [Empty.] Hungry. Cf. V. and A. 55: "Even as an empty eagle, sharp by fast" (see also 2 Hen. VI. iii. 1. 248 and 3 Hen. VI. i. 1. 268); and T. of S. iv. 1. 193: "My falcon now is sharp and passing empty."

44. [Doubt.] Distrust; as in J.C. ii. 1. 132, iv. 2. 13, etc.