45. [Detestable.] See on iv. 5. 52 above.

47. [Enforce.] Force; as often. Cf. Temp. v. 1. 100: "Enforce them to this place," etc.

50. [With.] Often used to express the relation of cause.

59. [Good gentle youth,] etc. "The gentleness of Romeo was shown before [iii. 1. 64 fol.] as softened by love, and now it is doubled by love and sorrow, and awe of the place where he is" (Coleridge).

68. [Conjurations.] Solemn entreaties; as in Rich. II. iii. 2. 23, Ham. v. 2. 38, etc. Some have taken it to mean incantations. Defy = refuse; as in K. John, iii. 4. 23: "I defy all counsel," etc.

74. [Peruse.] Scan, examine. Cf. Ham. iv. 7. 137: "peruse the foils," etc.

76. [Betossed.] Agitated; used by S. nowhere else.

82. [Sour.] See on iii. 3. 7 above.

84. [Lantern.] Used in the architectural sense of "a turret full of windows" (Steevens). Cf. Parker, Glossary of Architecture: "In Gothic architecture the term is sometimes applied to louvres on the roofs of halls, etc., but it usually signifies a tower which has the whole height, or a considerable portion of the interior, open to the ground, and is lighted by an upper tier of windows; lantern-towers of this kind are common over the centre of cross churches, as at York Minster, Ely Cathedral, etc. The same name is also given to the light open erections often placed on the top of towers, as at Boston, Lincolnshire," etc. The one at Boston was used as a lighthouse lantern in the olden time.

86. [Presence.] Presence-chamber, state apartment; as in Rich. II. i. 3. 289 and Hen. VIII. iii. 1. 17.