[124] "Sib" = akin. Possibly the word still lingers in the North Country: Sir Walter Scott uses it in the Antiquary, &c.
[125] "Wonning" sc. dwelling (Germ. wohnen). Spenser frequently uses the word.
[126] A Spenserian passage (as Mr. Collier has pointed out): vid. F.Q., B. 2. C. xii. 71.
[127] 4to. then.
[128] 4to. And here she woman.
[129] "Caul" = part of a lady's head-dress: "reticulum crinale vel retiolum," Withals' Dictionarie, 1608 (quoted by Nares).
[130] "The battaile. The Combattantes Sir Ambrose Vaux, knight, and Glascott the Bayley of Southwarke: the place the Rule of the Kings Bench."
[131] In some copies the name "John Kirke" is given in full.
[132] Bottom = a ball of worsted. George Herbert in a letter to his mother says: "Happy is he whose bottom is wound up, and laid ready for work in the New Jerusalem." So in the Virgin Martyr (v. 1),—"I, before the Destinies my bottom did wind up, would flesh myself once more upon some one remarkable above all these."
[133] 4to. your.