[1] The death of this earle was much lamented a|mong the people, considering his sudden fall and mi|s [...]rable end, where as not long before among all the noblemen of this land (within the which was such a number, as no countrie in the world had greater store at that present) there was none more esteemed: so noble and valiant he was, that all men spake ho|nour of him. After his death, as the fame went, the king was sore vexed in his sléepe with horrible dreames, imagining that he saw this earle appeare vnto him threatning him, & putting him in horrible feare, as if he had said with the poet to king Richard;
Ouid.Nunc quó factorum venio memor vmbra tuorum,Insequor & vultus ossea forma tuos.