Now, good god, graunt vs grace / oure sowles neuer to Infecte!
þañ may we regne in þi regioun / eternally with thyne electe.
[Some word or words in large black letter have been cut off at the bottom of the page.]
[NOTES.]
Numbering of linenotes does not always correspond exactly to a word’s place in the main text. References that are off by only a line or two have not been corrected.
[l. 11-12.] John Russell lets off his won’t-learns very easily. Willyam Bulleyn had a different treatment for them. See the extract from him on [“Boxyng & Neckweede”] after these Notes.
[l. 49.] See the interesting “Lord Fairfax’s Orders for the Servants of his Houshold” [after the Civil Wars], in Bishop Percy’s notes to the Northumberland Household Book, p. 421-4, ed. 1827.
[l. 51.] Chip. ‘other .ij. pages ... them oweth to chippe bredde, but not too nye the crumme.’ H. Ord. p. 71-2. The “Chippings of Trencher-Brede” in Lord Percy’s household were used “for the fedyinge of my lords houndis.” Percy H. Book, p. 353.