Search Results

You searched for:

Your search found 973 results in 1 resource

Category

  • Literary Manuscripts (973)
  • Non-literary Manuscripts (0)
  • Official Documents (government, civic, legal, religious) (0)
  • Literary Printed Books (0)
  • Non-literary Printed Books (0)
  • Maps and Works of Art (0)

Format

Date

  • 1000 – 1124 (0)
  • 1125 – 1249 (0)
  • 1250 – 1374 (0)
  • 1375 – 1500 (0)

Access Type

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series icon

TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

973 results from this resource . Displaying 421 to 440

lady, grace is thi frende; Ergo Therfore send us sum of thi grace. advocataOure advocate make us afore our ende, 1 nostra Oure synnes to wesche whils we hafe space. Illos tuos miseri- cordes oculosThi mercyful eene and lufly loke

lady, grace is thi frende; Ergo Therfore send us sum of thi grace. advocataOure advocate make us afore our ende, 1 nostra Oure synnes to wesche whils we hafe space. Illos tuos miseri- cordes oculosThi mercyful eene and lufly loke

In kynges corte, where money dothe route, Yt makyth the galandes to jett, And for to were gorgeouse ther gere, 1 Ther cappes awry to sett. In the heyweyes ther joly palfreys 2 Yt makyght to lepe and praunce, It

Robin Hood and Maid Marian: Introduction Robin Hood and Allin a Dale: Notes ROBIN HOOD AND ALLIN A DALE: NOTES 1 The "Come all ye" opening is only found in a few "commercial" Robin Hood ballads (Robin Hood and Will

too strong Go to Hereward the Wake: Introduction Robin Hood and the Pedlars: Notes ROBIN HOOD AND THE PEDLARS: FOOTNOTES 1 Gutch reads many a one. 2 Gutch suggests that "this nasty incident seems taken from Don Quixote" (II, 355).

a Ram’s Horn, introduction Go To Item 2, Right as a Ram’s Horn, text Codex Ashmole 61: Item 1, SAINT EUSTACE Item 1, SAINT EUSTACE: EXPLANATORY NOTES Abbreviations: CA: Gower, Confessio Amantis; D: Oxford, Bod­leian Library MS Digby 86; GL:

Is Forgrowe Return To The Table of Content Tax Has Tenet Us Alle, Notes TAX HAS TENET US ALLE: NOTES 1 Tax. The poll taxes of 1377, 1379, 1380-81, which were one of the chief causes of the rebellion of

scheme (i.e., Arfaxat, as Knight 1; Ameraunt, as Knight 2; Cos­dram, as Knight 3; and Affraunt, as Knight 4) actually causes problems. A reviser decided that it would make more sense if Ameraunt were Knight 1 and Arfaxat were Knight

O Merciful and O Mercyable Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 O Merciful and O

lady, grace is thi frende; Ergo Therfore send us sum of thi grace. advocataOure advocate make us afore our ende, 1 nostra Oure synnes to wesche whils we hafe space. Illos tuos miseri- cordes oculosThi mercyful eene and lufly loke

consider­ation of the pains of purgatory and the joys of heaven. The lives of both Saints Eustace and Margaret (items 1 and 37) close with reminders of their power as intercessors in heaven, a power clearly on display in this

this edition secundum illud in evangelio, "Qui ambulat in tenebris nescit quo vadat." 1. An Examination of the Light Here begins the tract "An Examination of the Light," which, I'm sad to say, the shadows of vice have suffocated for

Who Forgave His Father’s Slayer, text Go To Abbreviations Item 18, THE KNIGHT WHO FORGAVE HIS FATHER’S SLAYER, INTRODUCTION: FOOTNOTES 1 Pearsall, Old English and Middle English Poetry, p. 108. 2 On the custom of “creeping to the cross” barefoot

Verses on St. Benedict." Pp. 48-53. Go To The Life of St. Benedict THE LIFE OF ST. BENEDICT, INTRODUCTION: FOOTNOTES 1 The precise date of Benedict's death is unknown, but it was apparently around the middle of the sixth century.

The Life of St. Thaïs Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition Thou have, leve fadyr, mercy of me And gyfe me leve to folow thee." To wildernys scho with hym yede And bet

Notes JOHN LYDGATE, BEWARE (THE BLYNDE ETETH MANY A FLYE): EXPLANATORY NOTES ABBREVIATIONS: see the Introduction to the Antifeminist Tradition. 1 R titles the poem "The blynde eteth many a flye"; similarly, O reads "Beware the blynd etyth meny flye."

the Coronation Banquet of Henry VI Lydgate, A Procession of Corpus Christi JOHN LYDGATE, A PROCESSION OF CORPUS CHRISTI: FOOTNOTE 1 To put an end to our sins, which were diabolical JOHN LYDGATE, A PROCESSION OF CORPUS CHRISTI: EXPLANATORY NOTES

shifts from couplets into the English stanza, sometimes referred to as rhyme royal, used by Chaucer in Troilus and Criseyde. 1 sours. MS: flour. 4 the worthi nyne. The Nine Worthy are chivalric heroes representing gentiles (Hector, Julius Caesar, Alexander

Complaint of a Prisoner against Fortune: Introduction Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition all have abandoned him (line 85). All this sounds much like George Ashby's complaints, and they may well be literally

that the kinge maye undirstonde that it is seide for himself." Go To 17. Loginon 16. Assaron, Notes 16. ASSARON 1 reame, realm. 2 reyne, rain. 3 dyspence, dispense (spending). 7 easefull, easy. 9 leve, leave. 10 wele attempred, temperate.

Cite this page:

"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 24 July 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&ft=t&kw=1&sr=te&st=420