[62.1] Rolls of Parl. v. 182.
[62.2] Ibid.
[63.1] Rolls of Parl. v. 183.
[63.2] Ibid.
[64.1] Rymer, xi. 268.
[64.2] W. Worc. 468, 469.
[64.3] English Chronicle, ed. Davies, p. 69.
[65.1] Paston Letters, Nos. 120, 121.
[65.2] Even the passage above referred to would probably be an illustration of this if the original letter were examined. As we have reprinted it from Fenn, it stands thus: ‘Right worshipful Sir, I recommend me to you, and am right sorry of that I shall say, and have so wesshe this little bill with sorrowful tears that uneathes ye shall read it.’ The words in italics would probably be found to be an interlineation in the original, for though they stand at the beginning of the letter, they were clearly written after it was penned, and the only reason why they were inserted was to excuse the illegibility of the writing.
[66.1] Contin. of Croyland Chronicle, p. 525.