And p. 122, 39:
"Thus saith Dido, and the tother with that,
Hyit or furth with slow pase like ane trot."
And Shakspeare: "Why give her gold enough, and marry him to a puppet, aglet baby, or an old trot with ne'er a tooth in her head" (Taming of the Shrew, act i., sc. 5; Critical Notes on Shakspeare, Vol. I. p. 118.) It is also used by Churchyard—
"Away young Frie that gives leawd counsel, nowe,
Awaie old trotts, that sets young flesh to sale," &c.
—Challenge, 1583, p. 250.
And by Gascoigne:
"Goe: that gunne pouder consume the old trotte!"
—Supposes, act iii., sc. 5. [Hazlitt's edit. i. 230.]