now no thrifty tale seynThat Chauser they he can but lewdlyOn metris and on rymynge craftelyHath sayd hem in suche english as he canOf olde tyme as knoweth meny a manAnd yf he hath not sayd hem leue beotherIn o
in a newe arayThere dronkenesse reygneth in ony rowteThere is no counsel it is no douteO donegelde I haue non english digneVnto thy malice and thy tirannyeAnd therfore to the feend I the resigneLete hym endityn of his treytoryFy mamysshe
lith not in my tunge ne in my connyngI dar not take on me so high a thingeAnd also myn english eke is insufficientI muste be a clerk and a rethour excellentThat knewe the colours longing to that artIf I
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incipit paruus Catho.Hic incipit parvus Catho.Parvus Cato.Cato, Marcus Porcius, 234-149 B.C.,Burgh, Benedict,[56] p.[Westminster :W. Caxton,1483]Disticha de moribus. English and Latin.A loose translation into English by Benedict Burgh, with the original Latin text, of selections from the "Parvus Cato" and of
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flaundres & come with an huge poer himfor to destroie he praied him to trews for ij. yere so that english mar¦chantz& also frensh myʒt saufely gone & om̄ in bothe sydes ¶Thekyng Edward graunted it so that he must
in iiij. batailles forto fight on foot ayens hir enemies ¶And the English mynstrel∣lesblewe her trumpes and her pipes and hidously ascried the Scot¦tes¶And tho had euery english bataill ij. wynges of pris Archi¦ersthe which at that bataille shoten arewe
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came in a good old man and an auncy∣ent clothed al in whyte / and there was no knyʒt knewe from whens he came / And with hym he broughte a yong knyʒt bo∣the on foote in reed armes withoute
yere old gate Sarug and lyued afterward two honderd yere and seuen so siye hebrewes. but the seuenty and ysidorus set ten an honderd bifore two and thrytty and afterward two hon¦derdseuē He brewes saye that sarug thrytty yere old
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