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ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA.

VOL. I.

FIRST PART OF TAMBURLAINE THE GREAT.

P. 17, First Note. For " Cenerus" read "Conerus."

P. 72." Awake, ye men of Memphis!" These words are put into the mouth of Judas in Fletcher's Bonduca, at the con-clusion of act ii. (as I have noticed in the Addenda and Corrigenda to my ed. of Beaumont and Fletcher's Works, i, xcvi); and in Fletcher's Wit without Money, act v. sc. 2, we find "thou man of Memphis."

P. 83, First Note. 66 Compare the old play of The Taming of a Shrew (which there are grounds for believing to be the work of Marlowe)." See, p. lxv (Account of Marlowe and his Writings).

SECOND PART OF TAMBURLAINE.

P. 127. For "Whose holy alcoran," &c, read "Whose holy Alcaron," &c.

THE JEW OF MALTA.

P. 231, Third Note. For "Hist. of Engl. Dram. Poet. iii. 14," read " iii. 114."

P. 262, Second Note. Skialetheia, as Mr. Collier afterwards discovered, was written by E. Guilpin.

P. 270."We turn unto the air to purge ourselves." See note, vol. ii. 416.

P. 298. "thou shalt have broth by the eye." To the note on these words add :-Compare The Creed of Piers Ploughman;

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Grey grete-heded quenes

With gold by the eighen." v. 167, ed. Wright (who has no note on the expression).

P. 336. For "When as thy life," &c, read "Whenas thy life," &c.

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king of France"? but we find afterwards in this tragedy, p.

241,

"sith th' ungentle king

Of France refuseth to give aid of arms

To this distressèd queen, his sister, here," &c.

(I had printed Edward the Second before I recollected that it formed a portion of Dodsley's Old Plays.)

P. 195. Beaumont, fly," &c. I have neglected to mark the entrance of Beaumont: and indeed is it far from clear, when the author intended that he should enter.

P. 281.

"

"LIGHT. So, now must I about this gear: ne'er was there any 3- So finely handled,” &c,»/ #

should be arranged thus;

"LIGHT.

So, now

Live Must I about this gear: ne'er was there any

So finely handled," &c.

water from my tatter'd robes!"

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P. 282. "As douced that the reading of 4to 1622 is "tot

I ought to have tered robes." The earlier 4tos have, as in my text, “ tatter'd robes:" yet Reed in a note on this passage (in Dodsley's Old Playset catered my "The truth is, it was sometimes spelt one "in every writer of this period the word way: sometimes the other.

.SEC. LORD. Thus, madam, 'tis the king's will you shall hence." I suspect that our author wrote, "SEC. LORD. Tush, madam," &c.

768.9ia! otê mor?) 271TZTAT DIDO QUEEN OF CARTHAGE,

P. 384. " in troops all march'd to Tenedos."-The following passage of Sir J. Harington's Orlando Furioso will hardly be thought sufficient to the imputation of

a blunder in geograpicate our autok

eqff Now had they lost the sight of Holland shore, sar q And marcht with gentle gale in comely ranke," &c.

2

B. x. st. 16.

ex

Malone's

P. 397, Second Note. Since I printed this play have amined the copy of of 4to 1594, which was formerly and is now in the Bodleian Library; and I find that in it the line stands plainly,tibo tasi edt i syseesq eidt po sto s sl eds to sing Hollow pyramides of siluer plate." i Jov apel¶

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