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British Literary Manuscripts Online

42 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 20

attributed to William of Nassyngton, and founded on "La Somme des vices et des vertus," of which there were two English prose translations in the XIVth century, the one described under Art. 21 of this volume, the other known under

from Bede's Ecclesiastical History. Vellum; ff. 187. Late XIIth cent. (ante 1195). In double columns. Initials in red and green. Old binding of wooden boards covered with white skin. "Liber fratrum heremitarum ord. Sci. Augustini de Nouo Castro" [Newcastle-on-Tyne] (f.

Scotland Medieval Manuscript Number Ms. 3859 Source Library National Library of Scotland Description Savonarola. Writings of Savonarola, translated into English, in the hand of Alexander Falconar, Advocate, who added some comments in the margins, late seventeenth or early eighteenth century:

(ed. Skeat, 1870-89, p. 464), Bk. xix., places it after the defeat of the English at Byland (14 Oct. 1322). 6 6. Hymns in Latin, with English versions in seven-line stanzas. f. 107. 7 7. Narration by Edmund Leuersegge of

Two: Medieval Manuscripts from the Additional Manuscripts, Section B Manuscript Number 35,168 Source Library British Library, London Description CHRONICLE of English History from the Creation to 1225, in Latin: the same compilation of which the latter part was used by

fourteenth century. Except ff.118-121v, the manuscript is written in double columns. Some names of speakers in (iv) are added in English in a fourteenth-century hand, and references to scripture in the margins of (v) in a hand probably of the

Late xivth cent MS Part Two: Medieval Manuscripts from the Additional Manuscripts, Section B 33995 British Library, London 161 images. Date(s) Late xivth cent Author(s) [William of Nassyngton, Richard Rolle, Richard Morris] Collection(s) Part Two: Medieval Manuscripts from

concerning Piers the Plowman, together with Dowell, Dobet and Dobest. The latest version, called the "C" text by Skeat, Early English Text Society od., 1873. Begins: " In a somer sesonn when soft was pe sonne | I shoep me

Description RICHARD ROLLE, translation and exposition, verse by verse, with the Latin text, of the Psalter, followed by the six Old Testament canticles and the Magnificat, in the original and uninterpolated version as printed by H. R. Bramley, The Psalter

in English upon herbs, arranged in alphabetical order. It begins,"Agnus is an herbe that men clepeTutseyn" and ends at the entry for"Solatrum nigrum". ff.16b-42. For an edition of a version of this text see Essays and Studies on English Language

in. xv cent. Table of contents (f. 1) in a 16th cent. hand. Chapter numbers and titles in red. The old numeration of the leaves begins with 32. Perhaps (see Warner, p. liv) formed part of a book belonging to

the Additional Manuscripts, Section B Manuscript Number 41666 Source Library British Library, London Description 'MUM AND THE SOTHESEGGER': an anonymous English poem in unrhymed alliterative verse, 1751 lines, probably a continuation of the poem (entitled by W. W. Skeat 'Richard

Source Library British Library, London Description RICARDI Rolle de Hampole "liber qui vocatur stimulus conciencie," or Pricke of Conscience; in English verse. Imperfect; wanting the first 78 lines of the prologue. Paper; XVth cent. Octavo. Source Microfilm Collection British Literary

tales, legends, anecdotes, etc., from various authors, under subjects; translated from the Latin Alphabetum narrationum [Harl. 268, f. 45] into English. The preface is wanting. At the end is a Latin colophon in rhyming verse, containing the name of the

Additional Manuscripts, Section B Manuscript Number 28,256 Source Library British Library, London Description THE Revelation of St. John, translated into English by John Wycliffe, preceded by a prologue. The last two verses of the last chapter are wanting. Vellum; late

Description "THE BOKE of Moundeuyle, kny[?]t, " or the Travels of Sir John Mandeville, 1322 (here 1300)-1336: the commoner mutilated English version, with the lacuna after the words, as here written (f. 11), "Roys yles" (see the Roxburghe Club edition,

greatly from printed edition. (STC. 18419). N(esri), F(rancesco), 1500-1560? Source Microfilm Collection British Literary Manuscripts from the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C.; English Renaissance: Literature from the Tudor Period to the Restoration, c.1500-c.1700; Parts 1-2 Reel# Gale Document Number MC4400003165

of sixe hundrid yeres agon." The text of the Gospel is quoted in English, corresponding with the earlier Wycliffite version. After the commentary follow:——Short tracts, in English, on the Lord's Prayer, the Creed and Commandments, lists of the "seuon bodyly

Lawson family, of Brough Hall. co. York: it was owned in 1828 by Sir Henry Lawson, 6th Bart. of the old creation (See J. Raine, St. Cuthbert, 1828. p.iv); lent by Sir William Lawson, Ist Bart., cr. 1841, to the

English. Bog. "For þe brest and for him þat haþ lost his talent of mete," and ends " ends "it wole distroie þe pestilence be it nvever so felle." f. 43. HERBAL of the Pseu lo-Aemilius Macer, translated into

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 19 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sdt=1419&sr=mo