“In oure louerd þat he had ynome wel ioyful he was þo.” St Edmund the Confessor, v. 573, Furnivall, Early English Poems, Philol. Soc., p. 86. “Preostes ... fette to þis holi maide godes flesch and his blod.” St Lucy, v. 168, ib. p. 106. G. L. K.
103, note †. The met-yard, being a necessary part of an archer’s equipment for such occasions as p. 29, 148, 158; p. 75, 397; p. 93, 28; p. 201, 18, 21, may well enough be buried with him.
104. Russian. Similar directions as to the grave in Jakuškin, p. 99.
123. Robin Hood and The Curtal Friar.
P. 128 a, v. 80. The reading should be
Now am I, frere, without, and thou, Robyn, within:
otherwise there is no change in their relative plight.
125. Robin Hood and Little John.
P. 133 a. There is a black-letter copy, printed by and for W. Onley, in Lord Crawford’s collection, No 1320; the date put at 1680-85. A white-letter copy in Roxburghe, III, 728. See Ebsworth’s Roxburghe Ballads, VIII, 504.