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e, that sawe a colyer come by, _deryded hym_, because he was so blacke, and asked hym, what newes from hell and howe the deuyll fared. To whome the colyer answeryd hym: he was well, whan I sawe hym laste; for he was rydynge _and waited_ but for a souter to plucke on his botes. By this ye may se that he that vseth to deryde other folkes is somtyme him selfe more deryded and mocked. FOOTNOTES: [119] The blackness of colliers was employed of course from a very early period as a ground for satirical insinuations as to their connection with the Evil One. In 1568, Ulpian Fulwell, a distinguished writer of the Elizabethan era, published _A Pleasant Interlude intituled Like will to Like quoth the Devil to the Collier_; and in the old play of _Grim the Collier of Croydon_, the epithet grim was intended to convey a similar idea. In _Robin Goodfellow His Mad Pranks and Merry Jests_, 1628, however, Grim is the name of a Fairy. [120] Shoemaker or Cobbler. Lat. _Sutor_. + _Of Seynt Peter that cryed cause bobe._ lxxvi. + I fynde wrytten amonge olde gestes,[121] howe God mayde Saynt Peter porter of heuen, and that God of hys goodnes, sone after his passyon, suffered many men to come to the kyngdome of Heuen with small deseruynge; at whiche tyme there was in heuen a great company of Welchemen, whyche with their crakynge and babelynge troubled all the other. Wherfore God sayde to saynte Peter, that he was wery of them, and that he wolde fayne haue them out of heuen. To whome saynte Peter sayd: Good Lorde, I warrente you, that shal be done. Wherfore saynt Peter wente out of heuen gates and cryed wyth a loud voyce _Cause bobe_, that is as moche to saye as rosted chese, whiche thynge the Welchemen herynge, ranne out of Heuen a great pace. And when Saynt Peter sawe them all out, he sodenly wente into Heuen, and locked the dore, and so sparred all the Welchemen out. By this ye may se, that it is no wysdome for a man to loue or to set his mynde to moche vpon any delycate or worldely pleasure, wherby he shall lose the celestyall and eternall ioye. FOOTNOTES: [121] It is not very usual to find this word in its jocular sense spelled in this manner. It continued to be used in its original signification (_action_ or _exploit_) even to the Restoration, perhaps later. The most recent example of this employment with which the Editor has happened to meet is at p. 29 of Mauley's _Iter Carolinum_, 1660, where the writer speak
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