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The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse icon

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse

345 results from this resource . Displaying 161 to 180

Stonor . Item, a Byll of Wyllyam Wel|bekk of iiij xx li. payable in August . Item, a Byll of John Pasmere , skynner, payable in Februar next comyng, C. li. Item, Remanent payable at Myhelmasse come twelmonth of C.

later than 13 April . From A.C. , xlvi, 45. After all humble recommendacion & c. I have spokyn with John Harecort, and he sweryth he wull do for yow, and purposyth to sytt in the Ester wyke, but he

third wife soon after their marriage, and so to be assigned to 1482 . Anne Stonor was daughter of John Neville , Marquis of Montagu , and was staying at Taunton with the Marquess of Dorset , whose wife was

defe[nd. And Syr ] , this me semys it wer well don . . . [I have ] spake with John Ford to be your fermor at Horton , y have confortyd hym ther[in ] , and he is for

. PERSIA AND TURKEY ] 171 [ XXX . THE LOST TRIBES. GOG AND MAGOG ] 175 XXXI . PRESTER JOHN . THE ASSASSINS ] 179 [ XXXII . THE VALE PERILOUS. MONSTERS ] 187 [ XXXIII . VIRTUOUS HEATHENS

of him self þat þei schullen deme a riȝtful doom & not after þe face. And in his passion tyme John vii. 24. crist bade a synful harlot & cursed to bere wittenesse of euyle in cas ȝif crist had

helle; & so prestis ben con|streyned bi bodily peynes & deþ to leue goddis wille & precept for contrarie comaundement of goddis traitour, & in caas a deuyl in flech, as ihū crist seiþ of iudas scarioþ. John vi. 70.

of heere patroun & holynesse of here ordre. & þus seiþ ion soþeliche þat þer ben now many [1 ] John ii. [18. ] makid anticristis; for alle þise men þat ben aȝen crist in here loue, þei louen not

[etc. ut supra ] wittness the erthe that did quake wittness stonys that all to brake witness mari wittness seynt John and othir wittness many one In to witness of which thyng my nowne seale ther to I hyng and

Sone of Kyng John the iij., in the morowe of Seynte lucie virgen, afore Richard , Bissh op of Salesburye , mathewe ffiȝt Hereberte, Raph Hareng, Water ffolioth, James of Poterne, Water de ripariis, Morice Tureville, John Wykenolte, Justices iorneying,

the frosty nyght This worthy lymytour / was cleped Huberd ¶ A Marchant was ther / with a forked berd Marchaunt. In Motlee / and hye on hors he sat Vp on his heed / a fflaundrys sh Beuere hat

twynkeled in his heed aright As don þe sterres in þe frosty night This worthi lymytour was called huberd A Marchaunt was þer wiþ a forked berd In motteleye high on horse he sat vppon his heed a Flaundrisch beuer

which opposes the physician Master John with the Beard to the knight Sir John Mandeville , thus splitting into two doubles the names of one individual. In Chapter VII . of this version Sir John writes of his stay at

Syr Water and Jahne his ffurst wyff. Of Margete and Isabell : Margete was weddyd un[to ] John Hunteley: Isabell was weddyd unto John Popham . That þese persons, all or some of þeyse wer þe chyldryn of þe seyde

son Myles , whose daughter Isabel married Reginald Beauchamp ; the Beauchamp line of descent was Myles , Myles , John , Richard , Myles of Hicham, and Robert ; Robert ' s daughter Isabel married Thomas Ramsey , father

the missing words have been restored (in brackets) conjecturally. " My lady your mother " is Margaret , widow of John Croke ; her title is one of courtesy only. From A.C. , xlvi., 237. Jhesus . A o xviij.

, and our lord be with you both. Also, Madam, yff it lyke you, I have bene with my brodyr, John Betson , ffor money, and be my trouth I can none have off hym, he hath shewid me that

my grete chere this day made me at your place, but not for your park spoort, where in your defaut John , your parker, þat wold have bene my frende, is my gret enmye. I have received your letter con|teynyng

Mensam. ASCRIBED TO JOHN LIDGATE . [MS. Harl . 2251 ,? about 1460 A.D. , fol. 153 or 148. The parts between brackets [ ] , and various readings, are from Mr Halliwell ' s print in Reliquiæ Antiquæ ,

Stonor to his son Richard and the latter ' s wife Cicely ; Richard and Cicely were the parents of John de Stonor , the judge. From Ancient Deeds , C. 221. The seal is lost. Sciant presentes et futuri

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 11 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ac=f&kw=john%20marchaunt&sr=pv&st=160