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TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

612 results from this resource . Displaying 141 to 160

13 (seventeenth century ?). Edition Furnivall, Frederick J., ed. Jyl of Breyntfords Testament . . . and Other Short Pieces. London: Printed for private circulation by Taylor MS: British Library MS Sloane 1983 B, leaf 13. 1 with. MS: wt.

Hardin Craig. EETS o.s. 132. London: K. Paul, Trench, and Trübner K. J. Allison, ed., A History of the County of York: East Riding, vol. 4, The Victoria History of the Counties of England (London: Oxford University Press, 1979), p.

the strict justice of the king. When an elaborate pageant was staged for the purpose of recon­ciling the city of London with Richard II, his beloved Queen Anne was among those who publicly fell to their knees and asked for

sapphires, cameos, pearls, emeralds, rubies, and turquoise. And in Henry Thomas Riley's Memorials of London and London Life in the 13th, 14th, and 15th Centuries (London: Longmans, Green the others were cloth or fur studded with embroidered gems. Magic clothes

et dans les littratures trangres au Moyen Age. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1963. Holt, J. C. Robin Hood: Revised and Enlarged Edition. London: Thames and Hudson, 1989. Keen, Maurice. The Outlaws of Medieval Legend. Revised paperback edition. London: Routledge

with facing-page English translation.] Go To The Lufaris Complaynt LUFARIS COMPLAYNT, INTRODUCTION: FOOTNOTE 1 The Floure and the Leafe and The Assembly of Ladies, ed. D. A. Pearsall (London: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1962), pp. 161-62, note to line 325.

these wysdoms grow up in your age, And in your presence afore her passage, They purpos all afore yow for to syng, Yef to your hyghnes hit myght be plesyng. [Explicit. Go To Margaret of Anjou's Entry into London, 1445

Literature: An Anthology of English and American Arthuriana from the Renaissance to the Present, ed. Alan Lupack. New York and London: Garland, 1992, pp. 108-18. [A reprint of the reconstructed version by Bishop Percy (first published in his Reliques, 1765),

“The VII virtues contrarie to the VII dedli synnes.” 8 Therfor, man, of luffe thou lere. Compare the reading in London, British Library, MS Harley 2339: “Envyous man, of love thou lere.” 13 Of a clene meyden I was born.

of Adam Marsh and perhaps as a member of the London house, and second as one of four friars (along with Adam Marsh) writing to Fulk Basset, Bishop of London (1244-58). Adam Marsh was a prominent Franciscan from 1232 until

38–59, 171–80. [Based on Ashmole 61.] Spearing, A. C., and J. E. Spearing, eds. Poetry of the Age of Chaucer. London: Arnold, 1974. Pp. 174–92. [Advocates MS.] Speed, Diane, ed. Medieval English Romances. 3rd ed. 2 vols. Durham: Durham Medieval

Laing LL.D. in 1822 and 1826. Re-Arranged and Revised with Additions and a Glossary by W. Carew Hazlitt. 2 vols. London: Reeves and Turner, 1895. The Tail of Rauf Coilyear: Mit literarhistorischer, grammatischer und metrischer Einleitung. Ed. M. Tonndorf. Berlin:

Indexed in [stanzaic Life] Brown-Robbins, #1158 and #1159. Manuscripts [stanzaic Life]Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge MS 175/96, pp. 107-118. [Mirk] London, British Library MS Cotton Claudius A.ii, fols. 116r-117r. [Spec. Sac.]London, British Library MS Additional 36791, fols. 137r-137v. Previous editions

Waldron, and Joseph S. Wittig (Suffolk, England: St. Edmundsburg Press, 1988), 99-126. 2 W. R. J. Barron, English Medieval Romance (London: Longman, 1987), p. 223. 3 J. A. W. Bennett, Middle English Literature, edited and completed by Douglas Gray (Oxford:

Lancashire thinks the verses would probably also have been recited aloud so that everyone in the hall could hear them (London Civic Theatre, p. 125; for a subtlety with dialogue, at Ely in 1479, see I. Lancashire, Dramatic Texts and

of Anjou’s Entry into London, 1445 Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition [Atte the Brigge foot in Suthwerke [Pees and Plenté Moost Cristen Princesse, by influence of Grace1 Doughter of Jherusalem, oure plesaunce And joie,

Loomis, Laura Hibbard. Medieval Romance in England. London: Oxford University Press, 1924; rpt. New York: Burt Franklin, 1960. Pp. 301-05. [Study of sources and analogues.] ---. "The Auchinleck Manuscript and a Possible London Bookshop of 1330-1340." PMLA 57 (1942), 595-609.

[Primary base text for these poems]. · C: London, British Library, MS Cotton Tiberius A.iv. · G: Glasgow, Hunterian Museum, MS T.2.17. · H: London, British Library, MS Harleian 6291. · Tr: London, British Library, MS Additional 59495 (Trentham MS).

Its appearance in a London manuscript, owned at one point by the well-to-do London mercer Roger Thorney (c. 1450–1515) and later by the Londoner Stow (see Manuscript Trinity R.3.19, p. xxx), perhaps argues for a London context for the Pageant.

the legend had to be inserted by a later (probably fourteenth-century) hand as a supplement to the saint's life proper (London, British Library, Harley MS 105, folios 65-67). Not until the mid-fourteenth century do we find the Narratio incorporated into

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