Volume Ii Part 75 (2/2)
[232] Old copy, _no_.
[233] Old copy, _your_.
[234] Old copy, _you_.
[235] Old copy, _siker_, i.e., certainly, securely.
[236] Old copy, _whaler_.
[237] Old copy, _or_.
[238] Jury. Compare Hazlitt's ”Popular Poetry,” ii. 149.
[239] Here probably the word means literally _briber_; but _bribour_ also means _a thief_. See Way's edition of the ”Promptorium,” p. 50, and Halliwell in _v. Brybe_ and _brybour_.
[240] Old copy, _intided_.
[241] In the old copy, this and the following line are transposed, and some of the speeches are wrongly addressed.
[242] Old copy, _in_.
[243] Old copy, _none_.
[244] Old copy, _hanged_.
[245] Old copy, _neder_.
[246] Old copy, _ever_.
[247] Swoon.
[248] See Hazlitt's ”Popular Poetry,” iv. 239. The term _goldylocks_, curiously enough, seems to have been in early use in a contemptuous or bad sense.
[249] Old copy, _bid_.
[250] Old copy, _exhorting_.
[251] Old copy, _yea_.
[252] Old copy, _is_.
[253] Old copy, _cam me mery?_
[254] This marginal note has partly been cut off by the binder:--
resyng, _answer- ing other t always_ staff, , ysing to _other_.
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