[38] [There is a proverb: "The devil is good when he is pleased.">[
[39] [Tenor.]
[40] The priest is made to speak what the author seems to have taken for the Scotish dialect.
[41] [The writer should have written requhair, if anything of the kind; but his Scotish is deplorably imperfect.]
[42] The usual style in which priests and clergymen were anciently addressed. Instances are too numerous to require citation.
[43] [St. Rock.]
[44] [This passage was unknown to Brand and his editors.]
[45] Quiet.
[46] [Fagot.]
[47] [i.e., Tyranny, who disguises his identity, and goes under the name of Zeal.]