Dyghtande, p. [69].
Dysgrate, disgraced, degraded. Hath be dysgrate, hath fallen into poverty.
Een, eyes.
Eftsones, hereafter, afterward.
Eild, age.
Elephant, p. [263].
Ender, under.
English wood. If Inglewood Forest be here intended, the Queen is a little out in her geography: she probably means Sherwood, but neither was that in the page’s way to Nottingham, and Barnsdale was still farther north. See Ancient Popular Poetry, 1791, p. 3.
Ere, before.
Eylde, yield.