“Thow callyst me scallyd, thou callyst me mad:
Thow thou be pyllyd, thow ar nat sade.”
v. 116. vol. i. 130.
Pilled-garlick was a term applied to a person whose hair had fallen off by disease; see Todd’s Johnson’s Dict. in v.
v. 69. hocupy there no stede] i. e. occupy there no place, stand in no stead,—avail nothing.
v. 70. Syr Gy of Gaunt] So our author again, in his Colyn Cloute;
“Auaunt, syr Guy of Gaunt.”
v. 1157. vol. i. 355.
In The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy (which, as already shewn, strongly resembles the present pieces Against Garnesche in several minute particulars) we find—