Page 43. v. 351. how he dysgysed was] i. e. what a wretched plight he was in:

“Ragged and torne, disguised in array.”

Chaucer’s Court of Loue, fol. 329,—Workes, ed. 1602.

v. 352. watchynge ouer nyghte] i. e. over-night’s debauch:

“Withdraw your hand fro riotous watchyng.”

Lydgate’s Fall of Prynces, B. ix. fol. xxxi. ed. Wayland.

v. 354. ne couer myghte] i. e. might not cover.

v. 355. he wente so all for somer lyghte]—somer, i. e. summer.

Compare;