[Footnote 1: 'mobled'—also in 1st Q.—may be the word: muffled seems a corruption of it: compare mob-cap, and
'The moon does mobble up herself'
—Shirley, quoted by Farmer;
but I incline to 'inobled,' thrice in the Folio—once with a capital: I take it to stand for 'ignobled,' degraded.]
[Footnote 2: 'Inobled Queene is good.' Not in Quarto.]
[Footnote 3: —threatening to put the flames out with blind tears: 'bisen,' blind—Ang. Sax.]
[Footnote 4: —she had had so many children.]
[Footnote 5: There should of course be no point of interrogation here.]
[Footnote 6:
This butcher, whilst his hands were yet held up,
Treading upon his breast, struck off his hands.