v. 147. dome] i. e. judgment, thinking.
v. 148. Sulpicia] Lived in the age of Domitian. Her satire De corrupto statu reipub. temporibus Domitiani, præsertim cum edicto Philosophos urbe exegisset, may be found in Wernsdorf’s ed. of Poetæ Latini Minores, iii. 83.
v. 151. pas] i. e. pass, excel.
v. 154. pretende] i. e. attempt.
Page 56. v. 171. perde] i. e. par dieu, verily.
v. 173. nyse] i. e. foolish, inclined to folly, to toyish tricks: compare our author’s Manerly Margery, &c., v. 2. vol. i. 28.
v. 176. To pyke my lytell too]—too, i. e. toe.—In a comedy (already mentioned, p. 93. v. 15), The longer thou liuest, the more foole thou art, &c., n. d., by W. Wager, Moros sings
“I haue a prety tytmouse
Come picking on my to.”
sig. D ii.