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 curtain, on the public stage, as distinct from the Court stage, there is no evidence whatever, and the precautions taken to remove dead bodies in the course of action enable us quite safely to leave it out of account. There may have been hangings of a decorative kind in various places, of course; round the base of the stage, for example, or dependent, as Malone thought, from the heavens. But the only place where we can be sure that there were hangings was what Heywood calls the 'fore-front' of the stage, by which it seems clear from Florio that he means the fore-front of the tiring-house, which was at the same time the back wall of the stage. It is, I believe, exclusively to hangings in this region that our stage-directions refer. Their terminology is not quite uniform. 'Traverse' I do not find in a sixteenth-century public play. By far the most common term is 'curtain', but I do not think that there is any technical difference between 'curtain' and the not infrequent 'arras' or the unique 'veil' of The Death of Robin Hood. 'Arras' is the ordinary Elizabethan name for a hang-*