Is made diffuse, vnknowen, harde and obscure.”
Barclay’s Ship of Fooles, fol. 53. ed. 1570.
v. 775. enneude] “I Ennewe I set the laste and fresshest coloure vpon a thyng as paynters do whan their worke shall remayne to declare their connyng, Je renouuelle. Your ymage is in maner done, so sone as I haue ennewed it I wyl sende it you home,” &c. Palsgrave’s Lesclar. de la Lang. Fr., 1530. fol. ccxxvi. (Table of Verbes).
“Ylike enewed with quickenes of coloure,
Both of the rose and the lyly floure.”
Lydgate’s Warres of Troy, B. ii. sig. I ii. ed. 1555.
“And the one shylde was enewed with whyte, and the other shelde was reed.” Morte d’Arthur, B. iii. c. ix. vol. i. 81. ed. Southey.
v. 776. pullysshed] i. e. polished.
—— lusty] i. e. pleasant, beautiful.
v. 779. frowardes] i. e. frowardness.