[789:2] Spenser: Britain's Ida, canto v. stanza 1. Ellerton: George a-Greene (a Ballad). Whetstone: Rocke of Regard. Burns: To Dr. Blacklock. Colman: Love Laughs at Locksmiths, act i.

[789:3] See Heywood, page [9].

[789:4] See Fortescue, page [7].

[789:5] See Rabelais, page [773]. Also Shakespeare, page [77].

[789:6] See Heywood, page [13].

[790:1] Sit thee down, chaff-threshing churl! for let me sit where I will, that is the upper end to thee.—Jarvis's translation.

This is generally placed in the mouth of Macgregor: "Where Macgregor sits, there is the head of the table." Emerson quotes it, in his "American Scholar," as the saying of Macdonald, and Theodore Parker as the saying of the Highlander.

[790:2] See Burton, page [187].

[790:3] See Heywood, page [18].

[790:4] See Spenser, page [28].