[53] Your mastership.—Cooper.

[54] Quotha.

[55] Some of these are the heroes of romances.—Cooper.

[56] [A creature of the same country. Aly seems here to be the same as alyche. See Halliwell, v. v. alyche and alye.]

[57] Tertius e cœlo cecidit Cato. Juv., Sat. ii., 40.—Cooper.

[58] [Kindred, parentages.]

[59] I give thee thanks.—Cooper.

[60] Feats or deeds, from the Latin factum, "And rattle forth his facts of war and blood."—Marlowe's "Tamburlaine the Great," Part I., 1590.—Cooper.

[61] [This word has escaped Nares and others. But it is merely a colloquialism for love, and is in that sense still in familiar use.]

[62] [Guessed.]