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The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse icon

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse

57 results from this resource . Displaying 41 to 57

gentell / and to be freshe in bed / these / syxe things a woman dothe desyre / as Mr Chaucer dothe wryte. [ In a late hand. ] Desiren thynges .vj. as wel as I They wolde / þat

I me puttë, thogh I can but lyte. Mi derë maistir—god his soulë quyte!— And fadir, Chaucer , fayn wolde han me taght; Chaucer [ in 1700 hand ] . But I was dul, and lernèd lite lerned right R.

von Lumby in s. Ausg. des King Horn edirte Gedicht — sind willkühr|lich angehängt), dann The testament of Lydgate , Chaucer ' s Prioresses tale und Cae |cilia, darauf Erasmus (ed. in der " Sammlung altengl. Leg . " Heilbronn

mellere ¶ a Reve . a. Mellere. a Sunour. a Pardonnere. A somnour & a pardounner also ¶ a Maunciple Chaucer A maunsiple & myn self there were no mo The meller was a strong carl for the nonys ful

consail and re ed. (281. Hoccleve.) ¶ " O, maister deere, and fadir reuerent! Mi maister Chaucer , Chaucers R. flour of eloquence, G. Chaucer [ in 1700 hand. ] Mirour of fructuous entendëment, O, vniuersel fadir in science! Allas!

their religious enthusiasm. Now such characteristics are not uncommon in the fourteenth century : if it were permissible to name Chaucer in the same breath with the author of Mandeville , their mental attitudes might in some respects be compared.

wene And lat vs stynte / of ernestful matere Herkneth my song that seith in this manere ¶ Lenuoy de Chaucer . Grisilde is deed / and eek hire pacience And bothe atones / buryed in Ytaille ffor which I

/ as I gesse So that he werke / after his wyues reed [? whether the next 4 lines are Chaucer ' s. ] Thanne may he boldely / kepen vp his heed They been so trewe / and ther

I wene And let vs stynte of ernest-ful matiere Herkenyth myn song / þat seyth in this manere Lenuoy de Chaucer Grysilde is deed & ek hire pacience And bothe at onoys buryed in Ytayle ffor whiche in opene audience

ȝowe .I. wene And latte us stint of enestful matiere Herkeneþ my songe þat seiþe in þis manere Lenvoye de Chaucer Criselde is dede and hir pacience And boþe at ones beried in ytaile Wher-fore .I. crie in open audience

herknith my song . þat saith in þis manere / [No break in the MS. ] ¶ Lenvoye . de Chaucer . GRisild is deed and eek hir pacience And bothe at oones buried in Itayle For whiche I crye

de Mellybeo per Chaucer . [There are no line-numbers or breaks between the paragraphs in the MS. Tyrwhitt ' s breaks are kept here to prevent slight differences in the Six Texts throwing out many lines. ] [ Lansdowne MS

flaming ( or bleeding ) heart in her left hand, a staff in her right. See the Society ' s Chaucer Autotypes, Part 2.) [484 ] Aftyr pride wele I speke of the foule synne of enuye / whiche that

triangular pause-mark in the MS. ] [ Ellesmere MS, on leaf 157, back. ] [ 2157 ] [ Painting of Chaucer on horseback. ] A Yong man called Melibeus myghty and riche / bigat vp on his wyf that called

] he is so free and so merci|able [ 3077 ] þat he wil forȝiue vs oure gultes [ 3078 ] and bringe vs to þe blisse þat neuer haþ ende AmeN ¶ Here endith Chaucer his tale of Melibe

viuis & regnas deus Per omnia secula Amen Explicit narracio Rectoris et ultima inter nar|raciones huius libri de quibus composuit Chaucer ./ cuius Anime propicietur deus / AMEN. [ Follows , in Brit. Mus. Addit. 5140 , Lydgate ' s

women danced and tumbled to amuse her (Kittredge, Gawain and the Green Knight , 1916 , pp. 226, 297). In Chaucer ' s Franklin ' s Tale, a magician shows to Aurelius his lady on a daunce On which him-self

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 18 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=chaucer&sr=pv&st=40