[231] Pet, spoil.
[232] Old copy, no.
[233] Old copy, your.
[234] Old copy, you.
[235] Old copy, siker, i.e., certainly, securely.
[236] Old copy, whaler.
[237] Old copy, or.
[238] Jury. Compare Hazlitt's "Popular Poetry," ii. 149.
[239] Here probably the word means literally briber; but bribour also means a thief. See Way's edition of the "Promptorium," p. 50, and Halliwell in v. Brybe and brybour.
[240] Old copy, intided.