336 SHAKESPEARE’S [ WARDEN. 
tooth; the same being burnt, pulverised and incorporate - 
with oil or wine serveth to anoint the heads of young. 
babes for to make the hair grow thick; and in that 
manner it is used to bring the hair again of elder folk, » 
when through some infirmity it is shed. 
Hollana’s Pliny, bk, xxiii. ch. xviii. 
Ir an oak be set near unto a Walnut-tree, it will not 
live. Ibid, bk. xxiv. ch. 1. 
Warden. 
Winter's Tae, iv. 3, 20. 
Fruits in Prime or yet lasting :—Pears :—Warden (to 
bake); white, red and French Wardens (to bake or 
roast), etc. 
Evelyn's “Kalendarium Hortense,” November and December. 
: Lewes Warden (best without compare). 
Ibid., “ Catalogue of Pears.” 
WaRDEN in mince-pies. 
“Good Huswife’s Treasury.” 
To conserve Wardens all the year in syrup. 
Second part of “ The Good Huswife’s Jewel,” p. 38. 
For tart-stuff either Wardens, barberries, or damsons. 
“Good Huswife’s Treasury,” p. 7, a. 
I woutp have him roasted like a Warden 
In brown paper. 
Beaumont and Fletcter, “Cupid’s Revenge,” iv. 2. 
Wasp. 
TAMING OF THE SHREW, ii. I, 210, etc. 
He is a political and flocking or gregal creature, subject 
to monarchy, of a very quarrelsome disposition, and very 
prone to choler. Isidore affirms that Wasps come out of 
the putrefied carcase of asses, although he may be mis- 
