[l. 843], flowndurs.
But now men on deyntees so hem delyte,
To fede hem vpon the fysches lyte,
As flowndres, perches, and such pykyng ware;
Thes can no man gladly now-a-day spare
To suffyr them wex vnto resonable age.—Ibid. ll. 74-8.
[l. 867.] Hose. For eight pair of hosen of cloth of divers colours, at xiij s. iiij d. the pair; and for four pair “of sokks of fustian” at iij d. the pair (p. 118) ... for making and lyning of vj pair of hosen of puke lyned with cloth of the goodes of the saide Richard, for lynyng of every pair iij s. iiij d. xx s. Wardrobe Accounts of Edw. IV. (ed. Nicolas) p. 120.
[l. 879.] Combing the head was specially enjoined by the doctors. See [A. Borde], [Vaughan], &c., below.
[l. 915.] Fustian. March, 1503, ‘for v yerdes fustyan for a cote at vij d. the yerd ij s. xj d.’ Nicolas’s Elizabeth of York, p. 105. See [A. Borde], below. ‘Coleyne threde, fustiane, and canvase’ are among the ‘commodites ... fro Pruse ibroughte into Flaundres,’ according to the Libelle, p. 171,
But tha Flemmyngis amonge these thinges dere