For Parchas haue his last[e] terme set,' &c.

Id., Bk. v. ch. 38; fol. Dd 3.

Observe that parodye is here equated to terme.

[1558]. From Guido; according to whose account Hector, having taken a prisoner, was conveying him through the throng, when Achilles thrust him through with a spear in a cowardly manner, stealing up to him unperceived. See allit. Dest. of Troy, ll. 8649-8660; Lydgate, Siege of Troy, Bk. iii. ch. 27, fol. S 2, back; Shak. Troil. v. 6. 27, 8. 1.

[1634]. kalendes, an introduction to the beginning; see note to Bk. ii. 7.

[1653]. Lollius; this incident is in the Filostrato, viii. st. 8; I do not find it in Guido.

[1669]. word and ende, beginning and end; see note to Monk. Ta. B 3911; and note to Bk. ii. 1495.

[1689]. 'To present your new love with.'

[1760]. See note to Book i. 463.

[1764]. Here the story practically ends. Beyond this point, the lines taken from Boccaccio are less than twenty.