37, l. 2. his parasites and jackmen.
38, l. 12. and cryes, Anne has lost hir spindle.—13. flaill stollin behinde the barne.
39, l. 9. he said—she said.—13. that look over our ditch.—17. we hold the Bishops the cheapest servant.
41, l. 12. for the other Friers fearing.
42, l. 6. in hollow cellars, for the smoke of.
43, l. 2, He leapt up merrily upon the scaffold, and, casting a gambade, said.
49, l. 1. thy Majesties sometime servant.—(In this Letter of Seaton's, your Grace is uniformly changed to Majestie.)
51, l. 11. to put out thy.
52, l. 15. could greatly availl.—17. fostered the unadvised Prince in all dissolutenesse, by which means they made him obsequious unto them.
53, l. 7, 8. ten yearis or thereabout.—11. realme in these times.—intestine and cruell.—15. Levenax—Lenox, who was sisters son to the Earle of Arran.