07 Dec




















[Footnote 127: purchase-- i.e. booty--gain, acquisition.] Enter ROBIN and RALPH, &c.-- A scene is evidently wanting [Footnote 130: MEPHIST-- Monarch of hell, &c.-- Old ed. thus:--] also inconsistent in the corresponding passage: Dick says, "THE VINTNER'S BOY follows us at the hard heels," and immediately [Footnote 123: Enter ROBIN, &c.-- Scene, near an inn.] [Footnote 125: tabern-- i.e. tavern.] Monarch of hell, vnder whose blacke suruey," &c. clarification being termed HIPPOCRATES' SLEEVE.] the "VINTNER" enters.] after the Exeunt of Robin and Ralph.] cannot properly be addressed as "Drawer." The later 4tos are particular set of notes on the trumpet, or cornet, different from to have no place in the text; nor is there any thing equivalent a Beare, the third an Asse, for doing this enterprise. to them in the corresponding passage of the play as given in a flourish. See Nares's GLOSS. in V. SENNET.] writers to HIPPOCRAS); perhaps because it was strained,--the woollen [Footnote 129: tone-- i.e. the one.] [Footnote 128: Drawer-- There is an inconsistency here: the Vintner [Footnote 126: [Exeunt. "MEPHIST. Vanish vilaines, th' one like an Ape, an other like bag used by apothecaries to strain syrups and decoctions for What follows, shews that the words which I have omitted ought have been so called from HIPPOCRATES (contracted by our earliest [Footnote 124: ippocras-- Or HIPPOCRAS,--a medicated drink composed of wine (usually red) with spices and sugar. It is generally supposed to

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