46 SHAKESPEARE’S [ BULLOCK. 
with sweetmeats, as with figs and grapes and raisins. Some 
Bulls have movable horns, and move them one after another 
in fighting ; and be always fierce when they be taken, and 
destroy themselves, and die for indignation. 
Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk. xviii. § 100, 
Ir the right knee of a Bull be tied with a broad band, 
it will make him tame. 
Lupton, “ A Thousand Notable Things,” bk. iii, § 64. 
A su is the husband of a cow, and ringleader of the 
herd. When Bulls fight with wolves, they wind their tails 
together, and so drive them away with their horns, The 
blood of Bulls is accounted among the chiefest poisons. 
Topsell, ‘‘Four-footed Beasts,” pp. 47-50. 
[In Cibola, near Mexico,] they drink the blood of the 
ox hot (which of our Bulls is counted poison), 
Purchas’ “Pilgrims,” p. 778 (ed. 1616). 
Bullock. VY. Bull. 
Bunting. 
My dial goes not true; I took this lark for a bunting. 
Auv’s Wett tHat Enns WELL, ii. 5, 6-7. 
The goss-hawk beats not at a bunting. 
Ray’s “ Proverbs.” 
[The Bunting is the woodlark.] 
Burnet. 
The freckled cowslip, burnet, and green clover. 
Kinc Henry Vig “Vi 2s 49. 
BurNET is a_ singular good herb for wounds; it 
stauncheth bleeding, as well inwardly taken, as outwardly 
applied. The lesser Burnet is pleasant to be eaten in 
salads, in which it is thought to make the heart merry 
and glad, as also being put into wine, to which it yieldeth 
a certain grace in the drinking. Gerard’s “Herbal,” 5.7, 
[Evelyn, in his ‘‘ Acetaria, or Discourse of Sallets,” gives the 
same ‘characteristics of Burnet.] 
