Page [4], "dinnner" changed to "dinner". (Now you needn't eat any bread and cheese, as dinner will be ready soon.)
Page [4], [24] and [25], "seive" changed to "sieve" for consistency. (Duffy seated, carding and making rolls of wool, which were placed in a cayer (winnowing sieve.))
Page [8], "Joan" changed to "Jone" for consistency. ("Jone, take up the pie, if its ready or raw. I'm as hungry as a hound.")
Page [21], "ftom" changed to "from". (Madam watched her good man spurring his Dobbin till he was clear of Trove town-place, then down she ran to Mill and told old Betty that unless she got a speedy release from her irksome task she would drown herself in the mill-pool.)
Page [26], "its" changed to "it's" twice. ("Though it's comforting to have companions in affliction," said she, after a pull at the flaggon, "yet from the regard I have for your honour and mistress there, I have spoke of my ailment to warn 'e that as sure as I sit here with a broken twadling-string it will soon be the same with my lady there, if it's true, what I do hear, that you keep her to spin from morn till night most every day of the year.)
Page [33], "ninteen" changed to "nineteen". (The legend that the (originally) nineteen posts were damsels ...)
Page [35], "of of" changed to "of". (... would sooner or later overtake the sacrilegious destroyer of the ancient holy stones.)
Page [35], "alter-like" changed to "altar-like". (In many of the oldest villages there were formerly altar-like stones, known by the name of garrac zans, (the holy stones) which were protected by the fear of the goddess of Bad Luck;)
Page [43], "the the" changed to "the". ("And have ye been lawfully married, my darling?" asked the old dame.)
Page [60], "her's" changed to "hers". (That while, one Tom Trenoweth, a cousin of hers, offered a trifle more and purchased the sow.)