[145]. toggin, tug, pull about; comp. 186/318. T has the derivative, toggle: Sc. dialect, tuggle.
[146]. aturn, attire, or possibly, bearing, manner. OF. atourn, equipment, adornment. Comp. ‘for þi is hare aturn se briht,’ HM 23/10; ‘aturnet,’ 123/209.
[147]. hwerto . . . iturnde, in what direction they are going, what way of life they have chosen. Hare lates &c., let them wisely give heed to their gestures, behaviour; ‘porteures,’ F.
[150]. venie, acknowledgement of fault and petition for pardon, usually in the form of a genuflection or of a profound bow (curvatio). It was also used as a formal act of humiliation at the end of a Psalm and with the angelic salutation, as ‘cum tribus veniis totidem feci salutationes,’ Caesarius Heisterbach., ii. 33, 39: see also Ecbasis Captivi, ed. Voigt, ll. 769-72. Comp. ‘nimeð ower uenie dun et ter eorðe mid te honden one; oðer ualleð adun al uor muchel misnimunge,’ AR 46/27; ‘sumat veniam super terram,’ Gilbertine Rule, p. *lxxxi.
[154]. do—ut, put it utterly out.
[156]. eiðer &c., and let them raise one another and end with a kiss: ham in N is reciprocal.
[157]. þe greatluker gulte, who was more in fault; see 125/270.
[158]. witen &c.: see [90/73 note]. some, concord: comp. ‘to some and to sehtnysse,’ Ælf., Hom. Cath. ii. 198/19, ‘myd sib and myd some,’ OEM 89/15; ‘sib ⁊ sæhte,’ 11/184; ‘sib wið ute uihte,’ 133/60. somentale in T means concord; in Orm, sammtale, in CM, samertale, concordant.
[159]. umben: see [74/229 note]. For leaððe, OE. lǣððo, hatred, N has substituted the commoner wreððe.
[160]. o brune, alight; comp. ‘bed bringen o brune,’ SK 1355; AR 296/12. aga, go out; an uncommon use of a word which means, to depart. Comp. ‘That other fyr was queynt and al agon,’ Chaucer, C. T., A 2336.