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goeth for fear, at last, No question mooved where it should stand Upon his hed the pottage she cast, And heeld the pot stil in her hand. Said and swore, he might her trust, She would with the pottage do what her lust." As this story in the _C. Mery Talys_ is defective in consequence of the mutilation of the only known copy, the foregoing extract becomes valuable, as it exhibits what was probably the sequel in the prose version, from which the author of the _Scholehouse of Women_ was no doubt a borrower. P. 101. _If a thousande soules may dance on a mannes nayle._--This is a different form of the common saying that a thousand angels can stand on the point of the needle. "One querying another, whether a thousand angels might stand on the point of a needle, another replied, 'That was a _needles_ point.'"--Ward's _Diary_, ed. 1839, p. 94. P. 106. Scot, in his _Discovery of Witchcraft_, 1584, ed. 1651, p. 191, has a story, which bears the mark of being the same as the one here entitled "Of the parson that stale the mylner's elys." The passage in Scot, which may help to supply the unfortunate _lacuna_ in the _C. Mery Talys_, is as follows:-- "So it was, that a certain Sir John, with some of his company, once went abroad jetting, and in a moon-light evening, robbed a miller's weire and stole all his eeles. The poor miller made his mone to Sir John himself, who willed him to be quiet; for he would so curse the theef, and all his confederates, with bell, book, and candel, that they should have small joy of their fish. And therefore the next Sunday, Sir John got him to the pulpit, with his surplisse on his back, and his stole about his neck, and pronounced these words following in the audience of the people:-- 'All you that have stolne the millers eeles, _Laudate Dominum de coelis_, And all they that have consented thereto, _Benedicamus Domino_.' Lo (saith he), there is savoe for your eeles, my masters." P. 108. _Of the parson that sayde masse of requiem, &c._--This story is also in _Scoggin's Jests_, 1626, and perhaps the lacunae may be supplied from that source. Thus (the words supplied from _Scoggin's Jests_ are in italics):-- "Then quod the prest: tel thy mayster that he must _say the Masse which doth begin with a great R_. [when the boy returned, the Prest asked him whether the Parson had told him what] masse, &c." And again, a line or two lower down, there can be no doubt, on a
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