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to me somme fayre seruaunt honeste / and playsaunt / And thenne the marchaunt retourned on his way And Esope folowed hym / and sayd to the Marchaunt / Aby∣de a lytell here / And the Marchaūt sayd / lette
9991S106522998422376877In the yere of thyncarnacion of our lord Ih[es]u crist M.CCCC.lxxx. and in the xx. yere of the regne of kyng Edward the fourthe, atte requeste of dyuerce gentilmen I haue endeauourd me to enprinte the cronicles of Englond
goth this marchaunt wel and besilyAboute his nedis and creaunsith and biethHe neyther pleyeth at the dys ne daunsithBut as a marchaunt shortly to telleHe ledde his lif and there I lete hym dwelleThe sunday next that this marchaunt was
17539S1195719985477820222The myracles of oure blessyd lady.29 600dpi TIFF G4 page imagesUniversity of Michigan, Digital Library Production ServiceAnn Arbor, Michigan2005 December (TCP phase 1)99854778STC (2nd ed.) 17539.Duff 297.20222A07135.0001.001This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by
19206S1214609985664122241Here begynneth thystorye of the noble ryght valyaunt [and] worthy knyght Parys, and of the fayr Vye[n]ne the daulphyns doughter of vyenneys the whyche sufferd many aduersytees bycause of theyr true loue or they coude enioye the effect therof
youre gentilnesse quod our Oste What Marchaunt Sir parde wele þou woste þat eche of you mot tellen atte leste A tale or twoo or breken hys by-heste þat knowe I wele quod þe Marchaunt certayne I prey you not
Ricardus Sperte de Modbury , cordeweener. Adam Lovetorre de Modbury , marchaunt. Johannes Lede de Modbury , mar|chaunt. Johannes Bastard de Modbury , baker. Johannes Crewbere de Modbury , marchaunt. Thomas Hervy de Modbury , tayllour. Johannes Cryspyn de Modbury
] [Wepyng and waylyng / care and other sorwe I knowe I-now / on Euen and on morwe Quod the Marchaunt / and so don othere moo That wedded ben / I trowe that it be so fful wel I
tellen so meche sorowe / as I now here couthe telle / of my wivis cursidnesse now quod oure oste marchaunt / so god yow blesse syn ye so mechel knowen / of that arte ful hertely I pray yow
was his vsage And thus I lete hem drynke & ete & pleye This Marchaunt & this Monk a day or tweye The thredde day this Marchaunt vp a-ryseth And on hise nedis sadly hym auyseth And vp in-to his
Now goþ þis marchaunt faste and bysyly Til he cam in to Bruges meryly To Flaundres ward his prentys wel him gydeþ þe morne came and forþ þis marchaunt rydeþ Til þat daun Iohn rydeþ to his abbeye þey dranken
causeþ more dispence And compynable and reuerent was sche A wyf he hadde of excellent beaute That riche was for which men heelde him wys A Marchaunt whilom dwelled at Seint Denys Here bygynneþ þe schipmannes tale f . 204
A certeyn frankes and some wiþ him he ladde To borwe of certein frendes þat he hadde For which þis marchaunt is y wont to gon To paye xx þousand scheldes anon þat needes moste he make a Cheuesaunce For
shipmannes tale A Marchaunt whilom dwelt at seint denys That riche was for which men hild him wis A wyf he had of excellent beaute And compaynable and reuerent was she Which is a thing that causeth more dispence Than
And thus I lete hem ete and drynke and pleye This Marchaunt and this monk a day or tweye The thrid day this Marchaunt vp riseth And on his nedes sadly him auyseth And vp in to his countyng hous
and the beadle (line 37), a warrant officer working under the bailiff" (p. 250). John Alford cites the following lines from Piers Plowman (C.13.45-47): "If e marchaunt make his way ouer menne corne / And e hayward happe with hym
he was receyvyd right honuurably. And this marchaunt of Egypt had in his hows a fayre yonge mayden whom he shold have had in mariage to hymself, of the whiche mayde thys marchaunt of Bandach was esprised with her love
lift side unto the place of the knyghtes, and for to goo right tofore into the whyt poynt tofore the marchaunt. And the kyng also sortist the nature of the knyghtes whan he goeth on the right side in two
spak of now Was large, ryche, ful of puple eke, For that fame every man thedyr drow. Every knyght and marchaunt gune it than seke; Thei thowt it was enow, whan thei schuld speke, A kyng to be lorde ovyr
and i-staked, And other beddes by and by fressh i-dight, For comers to the hoost righte a sportful sight. The Marchaunt and the Mancipill, the Miller and the Reve, And the Clerk of Oxenforth to townward gon they meve, And
PREBENDA MAGISTRI JOHANNIS CLARELL Benefice of PREBEND OF JOHN CLARELL (YK.NT.SW.02) £ 36. 13s. 4d. PREBEND OF JOHN CLARELL null (pat.) PREB N/A If appropriated No Full entry £ 36. 13s. 4d. 55
Prebenda I. Brun Benefice of PREBEND OF JOHN BRUN (DA.DA.PB.20) £ 2. 0s. 0d. (prebend, canonry, or dignity, of secular college, of uncertain composition) PREBEND OF JOHN BRUN (pat.) ecclesiatical Not app. If appropriated No Full entry 1 Lincolnshire
PORCIO JOHANNIS DE LACY Benefice of BISHOP AUCKLAND PORTION 3 (DU.DU.AU.04) £ 16. 13s. 4d. (portion) JOHN DE LACY £ 16. 13s. 4d. If appropriated No Full entry £ 16. 13s. 4d. 25
PORCIO JOHANNIS DE LONDON Benefice of BISHOP AUCKLAND PORTION 10 (DU.DU.AU.11) £ 16. 0s. 0d. (portion) JOHN DE LONDON £ 16. 0s. 0d. If appropriated No Full entry £ 16. 0s. 0d. 24
PORCIO JOHANNIS DE METINGHAM Benefice of DARLINGTON PORTION 3 (DU.DU.DR.04) £ 16. 13s. 4d. (portion) JOHN DE METINGHAM £ 16. 13s. 4d. If appropriated No Full entry £ 16. 13s. 4d. 25
the foresayde l et res patentes vnto the foresayd John Saynell and John lake as in the releshe of the sayd John n leuenthorp made vnto the foresayd John Saynell and John lake more pleynly is contened of the whilk
prest es Raynald Tolle Nichus Vnderhyll John Fyssher John Newport will a m Cook John Clerk John Skryven will a m Taylo ur Henr Grasseley and willm lorett es say expressely as the said John meu er ell sayd in
the sayde John whitfeld to entre into the sayde halfe of the Man er of Rydale & loghryg w t all the ap ur tinance And the sayde John Flemyng to pay to gros+som to the sayd John whitfeld spacefiller
John Raulyn and John hor heires and hor assignes for eu er -more as in A dede to the foresaides Jenkyn John Raulyn and John therof made more playnly ys made menshone that the saides Jenkyn John Raulyn and
being wytnes Syr John of Peny n gton knyght william Flemy n g John n of Troghton John of wekers Robyn Dicson of Mytyrdale John n Nicholson Richard Nicholson williatear Nicholson John n Scharpe the helder John Scharpe the yonger
þere., Anon ase þe apostles seghen,, Seint John wep wiȝ his eghen,, þai weren amaid alle., ‘John’ quad Peter ‘leue fere,, Whi makst þous foule chere,, What is þe bifalle?’, ‘Peter’ quad John ‘iwis,, Formest þou sschalt telle me þis:,
of other versions of the so-called Battle Abbey Roll and the relation between the Auchinleck text and that published by John Leland in his De Rebus Britannicis Collectanea, see Smyser and the study by the Duchess of Cleveland, who resided
Additional MS 36983. Manchester, John Rylands MS 45388 (Engl. 50). St John's College Cambridge MS 256. Bodleian Library MS 29430 (Additional C.220). Note: Morrill does not list four of the manuscripts (BL Add. 36983, Manchester John Rylands 45388, St John's
How þis child mourning sit?, Mete and drink he forȝit., Litel he eteȝ and lasse he drinkeȝ;, He nis no marchaunt as me þinkeȝ.’, To Florice þan spak ȝhe, ‘Child, ful of mourning I þe se,, þus far herinne þis
he nemnede þous þo., þe heremite, þat was holi of lif,, Hadde a soster þat was a wif;, A riche marchaunt of þat countre, Hadde hire ispoused into þat cite., To hire þat schild he sente þo, Bi his knaue
formed by a dragon and a lion, of John writing on a tablet and the dove of the Holy Spirit approaching to his ear, at the beginning of the prologue to John. Fourth volume of a set of Glossed Gospels;
of John the Evangelist in Patmos, with a full border and a foliate initial 'S'(aint), at the beginning of the life of John. Miniatures were attributed to the Master of the Dresden Prayerbook (Brinkmann 1997), who also illuminated Sir John
that most of John Prise's religious manuscripts came from such houses.Sir John Prise (alias Sion ap Rhys, b. 1502 or 1503, d. 1555): 'John Prise: is Owner of this booke' (f. 2); cf. N. R. Ker, 'Sir John Prise', ~The
the various books John Harefinch, in 1708: inscriptions 'John Harefinch His Booke 1708', twice, and 'John Harefinch' (f. 274v); 'John Harefinch His Book' (ff. 19v, 20, 47); 'John Harefinch is owner of this book' (f. 74); John Harefinch is the
(?) (f. 88v); 'I tell you plyn of John Hanum [. . . ] (f. 102v); 'William Wylkensone' (f. 111v); 'Thomas Cowpland, John Bolton, Robert Spynk, Garry Jacson, James Loueden, Thomas Tomson, John Best, Richard Hilborn (f. 172); Harry bramam'