p. 89, l. [3122]. Belmore. Perhaps identical with Belmarine.
p. 90, l. [3130]. wode-wroth, “madly angry.” Cf. Skeat, Specimens of Early Eng. Lit., 80/37.
p. 90, l. [3141]. game, “sport, joke, affair.”
p. 90, l. [3154]. hat, “be called.” See note, l. 613.
p. 91, l. [3164]. bronde, “sword.” In the next line bronte means “blow, stroke.”
p. 91, l. [3189]. lande : commaunde. See note, l. 59.
p. 91, l. [3191]. The rhyme is spoiled. Perhaps than must be transposed so that we get the rhyme baptysed : imaryed.
p. 92, l. [3210]. there to abide in store = “to be kept in store”; cf. Skelton, ed. Dyce, I. 162, 221.
p. 92, l. [3227]. victory = “booty, spoils of victory, trophy.”
p. 92, l. [3232]. the hyer honde to have = “to have conquered or vanquished.” The same phrase is found in M. H. G.; cf. Hartmann’s Iwein, ed. Lachmann, l. 1537–8: