[9] [Intended.]

[10] i.e., Umpires. So Spenser—

"For what art thou

That makst thyself his daysman, to prolong

The vengeance past?"—Faerie Queene.S.

A days-man, says Ray, in his "Collection of North Country Words," p. 25, is "an arbitrator, an umpire or judge. For, as Dr Hammond observes in his Annotation on Heb. x. 25, p. 752, the word day, in all languages and idioms, signifies judgment. So man's day, 1 Cor. iii. 13, is the judgment of men. So diem dicere in Latin is to implead."

[11] Well content. In Psalm lxxxiii. ver. 8, we have—

"And Assur eke is well apaid,

With them in league to be."

[12] i.e., in the theological writings of Duns Scotus, who obtained the title of Doctor Subtilis.—S. See also note 25 to "The Revenger's Tragedy."