inconsistent in the corresponding passage: Dick says, "THE VINTNER'S BOY follows us at the hard heels," and immediately the "VINTNER" enters." ] [Footnote 141: your: So 4tos 1616, 1631.--Not in 4to 1624.] [Footnote 142: much: Equivalent to--by no means, not at all. This ironical exclamation is very common in our old dramatists. (Mr. Hunter, --NEW ILLUST. OF SHAKESPEARE, ii. 56,--explains it very differently.)] [Footnote 143: By lady: i.e. By our Lady.] [Footnote 144: to: So 4tos 1616, 1624.--Not in 4to 1631.] [Footnote 145: tester: i.e. sixpence.] [Footnote 146: the state: i.e. the raised chair or throne, with a canopy.] [Footnote 147: perfect: So 4tos 1624, 1631.--2to 1616 "warlike."] [Footnote 148: rouse: i.e. bumper.] [Footnote 149: a: So 4to 1616.--2tos 1624, 1631, "ten."] [Footnote 150: a: So 4tos 1616, 1624.--2to 1631 "the."] [Footnote 151: renowm'd: Old eds. "renown'd"; but earlier, p. 109, first col., 4to 1616 has "renowm'd": see note 23 and see note ||, p. 11. Note ||, from p. 11. (The First Part of Tamburlaine the Great): "renowmed: i.e. renowned.--So the 8vo.--The 4to "renowned." --The form "RENOWMED" (Fr. RENOMME) occurs repeatedly afterwards in this play, according to the 8vo. It is occasionally found in writers posterior to Marlowe's time. e.g. "Of Constantines great towne RENOUM'D in vaine." Verses to King James, prefixed to Lord Stirling's MONARCHICKE TRAGEDIES, ed. 1607." ]