v. 897. vol. i. 398.
Page 40. v. 254. Or shall I sayle wyth you a felashyp assaye] i. e., I suppose,—Or try, of good fellowship, (or, perhaps, together with me,) the song which commences Shall I sail with you? Compare the quotation from The Complaynt of Scotland in preceding page.
“Nowe, of good felowshyp, let me by thy dogge.”
Skelton’s Magnyfycence, v. 1095. vol. i. 260.
“Yng. But yf thou wylt haue a song that is good
I haue one of robynhode
The best that euer was made.
Hu. Then a feleshyp let vs here it.”
Interlude of the iiii Elementes, n. d. sig. E vii.
v. 259. bobbe me on the noll] i. e. beat me on the head.