he hit his hornes against the glasse, that the panes thereof flew Faustus happening to see the knight asleep, "leaning out of a [Footnote 137: both-- Old ed. "best."] the house; which the Emperor marking, said to himselfe, Now have she had a great wart or wen; wherefore he tooke Faustus by the THE HISTORY OF DR. FAUSTUS, Sig. G, ed. 1648.] bowed downe her neck, when he saw a great wart; and hereupon she vanished, leaving the Emperor and the rest well contented." HISTORY OF DR. FAUSTUS, the knight was not present during Faustus's and the courtiers, to their great amusement, had beheld the poor about his eares: thinke here how this good gentleman was vexed, seene on her or not; but she, perceiving that he came to her, hand without any words, and went to see if it were also to be insult by doubting his skill in magic. We are there told that I seene two persons which my heart hath long wished to behold; [Footnote 138: Mephistophilis, transform him straight-- According to THE his head; "and, as the knight awaked, thinking to pull in his head, as an apple. And thus passed [she-- certaine times up and downe for he could neither get backward nor forward." After the emperor Samuel: and for that the Emperor would be the more satisfied in the spirits have changed themselves into these formes, and have and sure it cannot otherwise be (said he to himselfe) but that "conference" with the Emperor; nor did he offer the doctor any window of the great hall," fixed a huge pair of hart's horns on the matter, he said, I have often heard that behind, in her neck, like milke and blood mixed, tall and slender, with a face round but deceived me, calling to minde the woman that raised the prophet