[28] F. and L. 151-158, 333.
[29] F. and L. 148, 224.
[30] F. and L. 192, 193.
[31] Cf. F. and L. 358-364.
[32] See the English translation in Bohn's Library, i. 214.
[33] A piece entitled 'De Duodecim Abusivis' is one of three pieces appended to Ælfric's Lives of the Saints in MS. Julius E. 7.
[34] No. 61 is The Storie of Thebes, which he of course knew to be Lydgate's; he adds it after the note—'Thus endeth the workes of Geffray Chaucer.'
[35] At the same time he struck out no. 56 (p. 34), as being by Lydgate.
[36] In Moxon's Chaucer, which professed to accept Tyrwhitt's canon, this piece was omitted; but it was revived once more by Bell.
[37] See The Athenæum, Nov. 4, 1876; The Academy, June 3, 1878; Aug. 3, 1878.