[171] “Mother of William Lambert, yet living.”—1st edition, p. 160.
[172] “Hugh Acton, tailor.”—Ibid.
[173] “In London at twenty-one pound.”—Ibid.
[174] “Alice Hackney found uncorrupted more than one hundred and seventy yeres after she was buried.”—Stow.
[175] “W. Walworth slandered by a fable of Jack Straw.”—Stow.
[176] “In London at fifty pounds, and in the Exchequer at forty-nine pounds ten shillings.”—1st edition, p. 169.
[177] “The king’s sons beaten to Eastcheape; there was no tavern then in Eastcheape.”—Stow.
[178] “In Westcheape linen cloth sold, but no silks spoken of.”—Stow.
[179] “Fripparia, upholders upon Cornhill, sellers of old apparel and household stuff in Eastcheape.”—Stow.
The following is the stanza alluded to by Stow (see Lydgate’s Minor Poems).