[332] Of, 1623, '33.
[333] Nought, 1618, '23, '33.
[334] Goblins, or terrors of the night. So, in "Arden of Feversham," 1592—
"Nay, then let us go sleepe, when bugs and feares
Shall kill our courages with their fancies worke."
Again, in Churchyard's "Challenge," p. 180—
"And in their place some fearful bugges,
As blacke as any pitche,
With bellies big and swagging dugges,
More loathsome then a witch."
And in the same author's "Worthiness of Wales," p. 16, edit. 1776—
"A kind of sound, that makes a hurling noyse,
To feare young babes with brute of bugges and toyes."
[335] Doth, 1623, '33.