[102] Introduction to Tarlton’s Jests, by J. O. Halliwell.
[103] Harl. MSS. 3885.
[104] Gray’s Letter to Chute. Mitford, ii. 138.
[105] Banks’s Collection.
[106] This is engraved in Caulfield’s Portraits of Remarkable and Eccentric Characters, as well as the wooden figure in the Tower.
[107] MSS. Reg., 2 A. xvi.
[108] Fairholt, Remarkable and Eccentric Characters, p. 56.
[109] Fuller’s Worthies, voce Monmouthshire.
[110] This is an old “dodge,” mentioned long ago by Decker in his “Seven Deadly Sins, seven times pressed to Death,” &c.:—“Then you have another brewing called Huff’s ale, at which, because no man must have but a pot at a sitting, and so be gone, the restraint makes them more eager to come in, so that by this policie one may huffe it four or five times a day.”
[111] Journey through England, vol. i. p. 175.