[479] [To vomit. One of the jests of Scogin relates how that celebrated individual "told his wife he had parbraked a crow"—a story which occurs in the "Knight of the Tour-Landry" (Wright's edit., p. 96). See also Fry's "Bibl. Memoranda," 1816, p. 337. A note in edition 1825 says:] This is a word which I apprehend is very seldom found in writers subsequent to the year 1600. It is used by Skelton, and sometimes by Spenser. See Todd's "Johnson's Dict."
[480] [Old copy, He falls; but Akercock evidently disappears simultaneously.]
[481] [Old copy, names.]
[482] [Old copy, song.]