Page[36],verse 11,for ken read hen.
[50],” 7,dele a.
[80],” 10,for consider read consider’d.
[94],note,for brought read bought.
[100],for Guynes read Luyne.
[119],line 7,for Nescis read Nescio.
[137],verses 4 and 5.It should have been observed, that the Prince and Buckingham on their journey wore false beards for disguises, and assumed the names of Jack and Tom Smith.
[144].The two first lines of this beautiful poem are here printed as they are found in the editions of 1647 and 1672; but they stand much better in Bishop King’s Poems, page 51, edit. 1657:

Let no profane ignoble foot tread neer

This hallow’d peece of earth, Dorset lies here.

FOOTNOTES

[1] An Epitaph on Master Vincent Corbet.

I have my piety too, which, could

It vent itself but as it would,

Would say as much as both have done

Before me here, the friend and son:

For I both lost a friend and father,

Of him whose bones this grave doth gather:

Dear Vincent Corbet, who so long