[20] And Koeppel, while granting the general superiority of C, gives as his opinion that in not a few cases E, nevertheless, where it differs from C, preserves the genuine, original reading (Englische Studien, x., p. 377, note).
[21] IX. 492, XIX. 459, XX. 396.
[22] I. 345.
[23] II. 572.
[24] III. 287.
[25] XIV. 246; XVI. 253.
[26] Cf. also in Gregory Smith’s Specimens of Middle Scots, p. xxx.
[27] Cf. Murray’s Dialect of the Southern Counties of Scotland, p. *92; and New. Eng. Dict., G.
[28] See Neilson in Scottish Antiquary, vol. xi., p. 102 ff., and Buss, ex adverso, in Anglia, Band ix., p. 495.
[29] Jamieson’s Memoir, p. iv.