[137:B] Olai Magni Gent. Septent. Breviar. p. 341.
[137:C] See Brand on Bourne's Antiquitates Vulgares, p. 194; and Strutt's Sports and Pastimes of the People of England, p. 307. edit. of 1810. Of this curious exhibition on Plough-Monday, I have often, during my boyhood, at York, been a delighted spectator, and, as far as I can now recollect, the above description appears to be an accurate detail of what took place.
[138:A] Act iii. sc. 9. Reed's Shakspeare, vol. xvii. p. 171.
[138:B] Reed's Shakspeare, vol. xvii. p. 172.
[138:C] Bourne's Antiquities apud Brand, p. 244.
[138:D] Fuller's Church History, p. 222.
[140:A] Hesperides, p. 337.
[140:B] Teend, to kindle.
[140:C] Hesperides, p. 337, 338.
[141:A] Hesperides, p. 361. Dramatic amusements were frequent on this day, as well in the halls of the nobility in the country, as at court. With regard to their exhibition in the latter, many documents exist; for instance, in a chronological series of Queen Elizabeth's payments for plays acted before her (from the Council Registers) is the following entry: