v. 186. ryde and go] A sort of pleonastic expression which repeatedly occurs in our early writers.
Page 57. v. 192. Pargame] i. e. Pergamus.
v. 198. wete] i. e. know.
v. 205. be quycke] i. e. be made alive.
Page 57. v. 211. the nones] i. e. the occasion.
v. 213. My sparow whyte as mylke] Compare Sir P. Sidney;
“They saw a maid who thitherward did runne,
To catch her sparrow which from her did swerue,
As shee a black-silke Cappe on him begunne