[P. 289], l. 245, le counte de Warwik e Huge le Despencer.—Guy de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and Hugh Despencer, who was afterwards so famous as the favourite of Edward II.
[P. 293], l. 299, On grene, &c.—In Robert of Brunne, these lines stand thus:—
Ther on that grene,
That kynrede kene
gadred als the gayte.
Right als I wene,
On som was it sene
ther the bit bayte.
[P. 294], l. 324, sire Corynée.—The fabulous hero who was said to have killed the giant Gogmagog.
[P. 295], l. 338, The fote folke, etc.—Robert of Brunne gives these lines as follows, with an introduction of his own, in which he says distinctly that they were rhymes which the English made on the Scots:—