1 (return) 2 (return) 3 (return) 4 (return) 5 (return) 6 (return) 7 (return) "In Hero and Leander, one did gaine A lasting memorie: in Tamberlaine, This Jew, with others many: th' other wan," &c. and hence Mr. Collier, in his HIST. OF ENG. DRAM. POET. iii. 114, understood the words, "in Tamburlaine, This Jew, with others many," as applying to Marlowe: he afterwards, however, in his MEMOIRS OF ALLEYN, p. 9, suspected that the punctuation of the old ed. might be wrong,—which it doubtless is.] 8 (return) 9 (return) 10 (return) 11 (return) 12 (return) 13 (return) 14 (return) 15 (return) 16 (return) 17 (return) 18 (return) 19 (return) 20 (return) 21 (return) "Renege, affirm, and turn their HALCYON BEAKS With every gale and vary of their masters," &c.] 22 (return) 23 (return) 24 (return) 25 (return) 26 (return) 27 (return) 28 (return) 29 (return) 30 (return) 31 (return) 32 (return) 33 (return) 34 (return) 35 (return) 36 (return) 37 (return) 38 (return) 39 (return) 40 (return) 41 (return) 42 (return) 43 (return) 44 (return) 45 (return) 46 (return) 47 (return) 48 (return) 49 (return) 50 (return) 51 (return) 52 (return) 53 (return) 54 (return) "LIKE TO THE FATALL OMINOUS RAVEN, WHICH TOLLS THE SICK MAN'S DIRGE WITHIN HIS HOLLOW BEAKE, So every paper-clothed post in Poules To thee, Deloney, mourningly doth speake," &c.] 55 (return) 56 (return) 57 (return) 58 (return) "But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun!" ROMEO AND JULIET, act ii. sc. 2.] 59 (return) 60 (return) 61 (return) 62 (return) 63 (return) 64 (return) 65 (return) 66 (return) 67 (return) 68 (return) [note ", p. 15, The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great: "" into: Used here (as the word was formerly often used) for UNTO."] 69 (return) 70 (return) 71 (return) "Before I do this seruice, lie there, peece; For I must HAUE A SAYING to those bottels. HE DRINKETH. True stingo; stingo, by mine honour.* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I must HAUE A SAYING to you, sir, I must, though you be prouided for his Holines owne mouth; I will be bould to be the Popes taster by his leaue." Sig. K 3.] 72 (return) 73 (return) 74 (return) "Get you a cittern, LADY VANITY, And be a dealer with the virtuous man," &c.; and in his DEVIL IS AN ASS, act i. sc. 1.,— "SATAN. What Vice? PUG. Why, any: Fraud, Or Covetousness, or LADY VANITY, Or old Iniquity."] 75 (return) 76 (return) 77 (return) 78 (return) 79 (return) 80 (return) 81 (return) 82 (return) 83 (return) 84 (return) 85 (return) "I fear she knows—'tis so—of my device In Don Mathias' and LODOVICO'S deaths." p. 162, sec. col.] 86 (return) 87 (return) 'The diamond that I talk of NE'ER WAS FOIL'D'." COLLIER (apud Dodsley's O. P.). But see that passage, p. 155, sec. col., and note "". [i.e. note 70.]] 88 (return) 89 (return) 90 (return) 91 (return) 92 (return) Old ed. thus; "Enter MATHIAS. Math. This is the place, now Abigail shall see Whether Mathias holds her deare or no. Enter Lodow. reading. Math. What, dares the villain write in such base terms? Lod. I did it, and reuenge it if thou dar'st."] 93 (return) 94 (return) 95 (return) "Cassius, WHAT NIGHT IS THIS!" (after which words the modern editors improperly retain the interrogation-point of the first folio).] 96 (return) 97 (return) "THESE ARMS OF MINE shall be thy winding-sheet; My heart, sweet boy, SHALL BE THY SEPULCHRE,"— lines, let me add, not to be found in THE TRUE TRAGEDIE OF RICHARD DUKE OF YORKE, on which Shakespeare formed that play.] 98 (return) 99 (return) 100 (return) 101 (return) 102 (return) 103 (return) 104 (return) 105 (return) 106 (return) 107 (return) 108 (return) 109 (return) (note *, p. 69, The Second Part of Tamburlaine the Great: "* Well said: Equivalent to—Well done! as appears from innumerable passages of our early writers: see, for instances, my ed. of Beaumont and Fletcher's WORKS, vol. i. 328, vol. ii. 445, vol. viii. 254.")] 110 (return) 111 (return) 112 (return) 113 (return) "Grey grete-heded quenes With gold BY THE EIGHEN." v. 167, ed. Wright (who has no note on the expression): and Beaumont and Fletcher's KNIGHT OF THE BURNING PESTLE, act ii. sc. 2; "here's money and gold BY TH' EYE, my boy." In Fletcher's BEGGARS' BUSH, act iii. sc. 1, we find, "Come, English beer, hostess, English beer BY THE BELLY!"] 114 (return) 115 (return) 116 (return) 117 (return) (From p. 148, this play: "Enter FERNEZE governor of Malta, KNIGHTS, and OFFICERS; met by CALYMATH, and BASSOES of the TURK.")] 118 (return) 119 (return) (note "", p. 25, The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great:) "basilisks: Pieces of ordnance so called. They were of immense size; see Douce's ILLUST. OF SHAKESPEARE, i. 425."] 120 (return) 121 (return) 122 (return) 123 (return) 124 (return) 125 (return) 126 (return) 127 (return) 128 (return) 129 (return) 130 (return) 131 (return) 132 (return) 133 (return) FRIAR JACOMO. Why does he go to thy house? let him be gone Old ed. thus; "BAR. This is meere frailty, brethren, be content. Fryar Barnardine goe you with Ithimore. ITH. You know my mind, let me alone with him; Why does he goe to thy house, let him begone."] 134 (return) 135 (return) 136 (return) "Therefore 'tis requisite he should not live," I may observe that we have had before (p. 152, first col.) a similar form of expression,— "It is not necessary I be seen."] 137 (return) (note """, p. 13, The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great:) "In fair, &c.: Here "FAIR" is to be considered as a dissyllable: compare, in the Fourth act of our author's JEW OF MALTA, "I'll feast you, lodge you, give you FAIR words, And, after that," &c."] 138 (return) 139 (return) 140 (return) 141 (return) ITHAMORE. Towards one: Might be adduced, among other passages, to shew that the modern editors are right when they print in Shakespeare's KING JOHN. act iii. sc. 3, "If the midnight bell Did, with his iron tongue and brazen mouth, Sound ONE into the drowsy ear of NIGHT," &c.] 142 (return) 143 (return) 144 (return) 145 (return) (p. 160, this play:) " Enter BELLAMIRA. (91) BELLAMIRA. Since this town was besieg'd," etc.] 146 (return) 147 (return) 148 (return) 149 (return) 150 (return) "My Tuskes more stiffe than are a Cats MUSCHATOES." S. Rowley's NOBLE SPANISH SOLDIER, 1634, Sig. C. "His crow-black MUCHATOES." THE BLACK BOOK,—Middleton's WORKS, v. 516, ed. Dyce.] 151 (return) "That if he had A TURKE OF TENPENCE bin," &c. WORKES, p. 82, ed. 1630. And see note on Middleton's WORKS, iii. 489, ed. Dyce.] 152 (return) 153 (return) "I'le make him send me half he has, & glad he scapes so too. PEN AND INKE: I'll write vnto him, we'le haue mony strait." There can be no doubt that the words "Pen and inke" were a direction to the property-man to have those articles on the stage.] 154 (return) 155 (return) 156 (return) 157 (return) "Vpon the siluer bosome of the STREAME First gan faire Themis shake her amber locks, Whom all the Nimphs that waight on Neptunes REALME Attended from the hollowe of the rocks." Lodge's SCILLAES METAMORPHOSIS, &c. 1589, Sig. A 2. "How he may surest stablish his new conquerd REALME, How of his glorie fardest to deriue the STREAME." A HERINGS TAYLE, &c. 1598, Sig. D 3. "Learchus slew his brother for the crowne; So did Cambyses fearing much the DREAME; Antiochus, of infamous renowne, His brother slew, to rule alone the REALME." MIROUR FOR MAGISTRATES, p. 78, ed. 1610.] 158 (return) 159 (return) 160 (return) 161 (return) 162 (return) 163 (return) 164 (return) p. 170, second column, this play: "ITHAMORE. [writing: SIRRAH JEW, AS YOU LOVE YOUR LIFE, SEND ME FIVE HUNDRED CROWNS, AND GIVE THE BEARER A HUNDRED. —Tell him I must have't."] 165 (return) 166 (return) 167 (return) 168 (return) 169 (return) 170 (return) "And RYUO will he cry and CASTILE too." LOOKE ABOUT YOU, 1600, Sig. L. 4. A writer in THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW, vol. xliii. 53, thinks that it "is a misprint for RICO-CASTELLANO, meaning a Spaniard belonging to the class of RICOS HOMBRES, and the phrase therefore is— 'Hey, NOBLE CASTILIAN, a man's a man!' 'I can pledge like a man and drink like a man, MY WORTHY TROJAN;' as some of our farce-writers would say." But the frequent occurrence of RIVO in various authors proves that it is NOT a misprint.] 171 (return) 172 (return) "Itha. I carried the broth that poisoned the nuns; and he and I— Pilia. Two hands snickle-fast— Itha. Strangled a friar."] 173 (return) 174 (return) 175 (return) 176 (return) "Era di sopra a la fonte UN CARRUBBIO, L'ARBOR, SI DICE, OVE S'IMPICCO GIUDA," &c. MORGANTE MAG. C. xxv. st. 77.] 177 (return) 178 (return) 179 (return) 180 (return) 181 (return) 182 (return) 183 (return) 184 (return) 185 (return) 186 (return) 187 (return) 188 (return) 189 (return) 190 (return) 191 (return) 192 (return) 193 (return) 194 (return) 195 (return) 196 (return) [note "", p. 25, The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great: """ basilisks: Pieces of ordnance so called. They were of immense size; see Douce's ILLUST. OF SHAKESPEARE, i. 425."] 197 (return) "And toward Calabria back'd by Sicily, Two lofty Turrets that command the Towne. WHEN Siracusian Dionisius reign'd; I wonder how it could be conquer'd thus?"] 198 (return) 199 (return) 200 (return) 201 (return) 202 (return) 203 (return) 204 (return) 205 (return) Enter KNIGHTS and MARTIN DEL BOSCO Old ed. has merely "A charge, the cable cut, A Caldron discouered."] 206 (return) 207 (return) 208 (return) 209 (return) 210 (return)
SQUARE BRACKETS: The square brackets, i.e. [ ] are copied from the printed book, without change, except that the stage directions usually do not have closing brackets. These have been added. FOOTNOTES: For this E-Text version of the book, the footnotes have been consolidated at the end of the play. Numbering of the footnotes has been changed, and each footnote is given a unique identity in the form [XXX]. CHANGES TO THE TEXT: Character names were expanded. For Example, BARABAS was BARA., FERNEZE was FERN., etc.
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