The Forme of Cury - A Roll of Ancient English Cookery Compiled, about A.D. 1390 by Samuel Pegge
page 31 of 227 (13%)
page 31 of 227 (13%)
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Sylva, p. 201. 469. ed. Hunter.
[58] Lister, Praf. ad Apicium, p. xi. [59] So we have _lozengs of golde_. Lel. Collect. IV. p. 227. and a wild boar's head _gylt_, p. 294. A peacock with _gylt neb_. VI. p. 6. _Leche Lambart gylt_, ibid. [60] No. 68. 20. 58. See my friend Dr. Percy on the Northumberland- Book, p. 415. and MS Ed. 34. [61] No. 47. 51. 84. [62] No. 93. 132. MS Ed. 37. [63] Perhaps Turmerick. See ad loc. [64] Ter. Andr. I. 1. where Donatus and Mad. Dacier explain it of Cooking. Mr. Hearne, in describing our Roll, see above, p. xi, by an unaccountable mistake, read _Fary_ instead of _Cury_, the plain reading of the MS. [65] Junii Etym. v. Diet. [66] Reginaldus Phisicus. M. Paris, p. 410. 412. 573. 764. Et in Vit. p. 94. 103. Chaucer's _Medicus_ is a doctor of phisick, p.4. V. Junii Etym. voce Physician. For later times, v. J. Rossus, p. 93. [67] That of Donatus is modest 'Culina medicina famulacrix est.' [68] Lel. Collect. IV. p. 183. 'Diod. Siculus refert primos Agypti Reges victum quotidianum omnino sumpsisse ex medicorum prascripto.' Lister ad Apic. p. ix. [69] See also Lylie's Euphues, p. 282. Cavendish, Life of Wolsey, p. 151, where we have _callis_, male; Cole's and Lyttleton's Dict. and Junii Etymolog. v. Collice. [70] See however, No. 191, and Editor's MS II. 7. [71] Vide the proeme. [72] See above. [73] Univ. Hist. XV. p. 352. 'Asopus pater linguas avium humana |
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