Volume Vii Part 121 (1/2)
[378] So second edit. First edit., _asgoe_.
[379] [Old copies, _boye_.]
[380] It would seem that something is wanting after this speech, unless we are to suppose that here the Boy lies down and falls asleep, and that he wakens on the second entrance of Hodge,--where, however, the edits.
distinctly mark ”Enter Hodge _and Boy_”; see later: _Enter [severally]_ HODGE _and_ BOY.
[381] i.e., Excels.
[382] So second edit. First edit. _clowdes_.
[383] So second edit. Not in first edit.
[384] Second edit. _ye_.
[385] Qy. Is this a stage direction crept into the text?
[386] Second edit. _grope_.
[387] Second edit. _so_.
[388] [Old copies, _paint_.]
[389] So second edit. First edit. _buze_.
[390] Second edit. _lips_.
[391] So second edit. First edit. _I have had a Pumpe set up, as good_.
[392] i.e., (Perhaps) swore by our Lady of Walsingham, in Norfolk.
[393] [The name of a game, though here used as a bye-word. See ”Popular Antiquities of Gr. Britain,” ii. 341.]
[394] So second edit. First edit., _Tripe-cheeke_.
[395] i.e., Had I known the consequences; a common proverbial expression of repentance.
[396] See note [16].
[397] So second edit. First edit., _his_.
[398] [Edits., _me_.]
[399] Qy. a proverbial allusion to the famous Brazen-head?
[400] So second edit. First edit., _breath_.
[401] So second edit. Not in first edit.
[402] The hero of a popular German jest-book (”Eulenspiegel,”) which was translated into English at a very early period: see Gifford's note on Jonson's ”Works,” iv. 60, and Nares' Gloss. in v.