[ [121] ]
Sweet cicely, sometimes miscalled myrrh. Mure is the Saxon word. At one time the plant was not uncommon as a salad.—W.

[ [122] ]
Neither "silent" nor "garrulous."

[ [123] ]
A famine at hand is first seen in the horse-manger, when the poor do fall to horse corn.—H.

[ [124] ]
The size of bread is very ill kept or not at all looked unto in the country towns or markets.—H.

[ [125] ]
Holinshed. This occurs in the last of Harrison's prefatory matter.—W.

[ [126] ]
This word is not obsolete. South coast countrymen still eatnuntions and notluncheons.—W.

[ [127] ]
Here follows a disquisition upon the table practices of the ancients.—W.

[ [128]] (COS.)

"I am an English man and naked I stand here,

Musying in my mynde what rayment I shall were;