v. 8. Allectuary] i. e. Electuary.

—— arrectyd] i. e. perhaps, considered sovereign; to arrect is to impute: or it may simply mean—raised up; our author’s Garlande of Laurell begins

Arectyng my syght towarde the zodyake.”—vol. i. 361.

—— redres] i. e. relieve, remedy.

v. 9. axys] i. e. fits, paroxysms.

“Yet I haue felt of the sicknesse through May

Both hote and cold, and axes euery day.”

Chaucer’s Cuckow and Nightingale,—Workes, fol. 316. ed. 1602.

“Ther comyth a quarteyn, seith in his gret accesse,” &c.