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Notes

1] wend: change the character of (OED "wend" v. 1, no. 3). Under the old English custom of gavelkind, a widow was entitled to half her deceased husband's lands and tenements as long as she remained unmarried and bore no child. John Rastell's An Exposition of Certaine Difficult and Obscure Wordes (London, 1579), fol. 112v, explains: "if she when she is deliuered of child, & the infant be herde cry, & that the hue & crie, be raised, & the country assembled, and haue the viewe of the child so borne, and the mother: then let her loose her dower wholy, and otherwise not, so longe as shee holdeth her a widow,whereof it is sayde in kentish.
He that doth wende her,
Let him lende her."
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2] lend: give money, support. Back to Line