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To pleyen / and to romen to and fro And in hir walk this blynde man they mette Croked and old / with eyen faste yshette ¶ In name of Crist cryde this blynde Britoun Dame Hermengyld / yif me
al þe contre merye Was for þis child and god þey þank and herye ¶ Whan it was tuo ȝeer old and fro be breste Departed of his norice on a day This marquys caughte ȝit anoþer leste To tempte
casten it up fram on to oþur : ase huy it al-to-drowe and to-tere. his felawe stod and bi-h e old : and was neiȝh wod for fere. ¶ Seint Eadmund him ȝaf confort : ant tolde him ȝwat it
was in þat contre. To þe temple þanne he was i sent, He was welcome verreiement Of symeon þat Man old, þat muche of him bi fore hadde i told. þer after þre kinges of vncouþe londe To þat child
And haue an Ax / and somme a Mace of steel Ther is no newe gyse / that it nas old Armed were they / as I haue yow told Everych / after his opinion Ther maistow seen / comynge
condiciounnys / that I haue seyd before / þat is to seye / that they been trewe wyse & of old experience / [ 2360 ] And werke not in euery thingis alwey be on conseylour alone / for sumtyme
and bien expert in many thynges and han ben appreved in counseillynges [ 2354 ] ffor the booke seyth in old men is al the sapience and in long tyme the prudence [ 2355 ] As Tullius seyth that grete
legges weel And haue an ax and eek a mace of steel Ther nys no newe gyse þat it nas old Armed were þey as I haue told Euerich after his owen opinioun Ther maistow se comyng wiþ Palomoun ligurge
wise [77 ] ¶ Stondeth vpon þe weyes and seeþ & axeþ of olde pathes þat is to sayn of old sentence which is þe good way. [78 ] . . . no gap in the MS. and ȝe schul
in þat lond: Costus his name was told. A douhter he had, & no mo, XV . winter was sche old: Katerine was hir riȝt name, Of w itt & wisdome was sche bold; Jhesu sche loued aldermest — For
paast.̉ of clennes & of trouþe W. V. ' Crist is offrid oure pask. And so ete we, not in old sourdouȝ, nether in sourdouȝ of malice and weywardnesse, but in therf thingis of clennesse and treuthe. ' / Þise
quyete of his herte & subuertith his soule. [562 ] Of Ire comith these stynkende gendruris Fyrst hate that is old wrathe / Discord thurh whyche a man for-sakith his olde frend / that he hath louyd ful longe /
ech-on: Ovt of Engelonde he let heom driue: þat þare ne moste leue non, Sike ne feble, . ȝung ne old: ne womman þat was with childe, Ne þe children þat soukinde weren: —muche was he on-milde! In hire Armes
[ 2983 ] she was wonderly glad in hire herte / and seyde [ 2984 ] ¶ Ther is an old prouerbe quod she seith ‖. That the ¶ Prudence goodnesse þat thou mayst do this day / do it
his harnays With nayles yelwe / and brighte as any gold He hadde a Berys Skyn / colblak / for old His longe heer / was kembed bihynde his bak As any Rauenes fetthere / it shoon for blak A
says Boccaccio ( XI . 9), not excepting ' Egeo; ' but he immediately goes on to speak of the old man ' s attempt to con|sole ' Palemone, ' and the rest,—without the slightest success ( XI . 11).—(See
alle oþere to doo me anoþer vilonye [ 2653 ] For it is writen ¶ Tak no vengeaunce of an old vilonye þou suf|frest þin aduersarie do þe a newe vilonye. [ 2654 ] and also for my suffraunce men
acquired since no. 879; and so we are led on to the next charter, which enumerates by name both the old properties and those lately acquired. ] A Confirmacion of kyng henry fitȝ Emperesse confermyng all maner of yiftis afore
til þat þe wounde ȝeue quytture & þe akþe be aswagid. & aftirward leye in þe wounde drie lynt of old clooþ, & fille þe wounde of þe same lynet, & leie aboue þe mundificatif of mel roset & barly
substaunce of þe synwe & of þe bon be apeyred in þe grounde, & specialyche ȝif þe festre be nouȝt old & ȝif þat þe callosite be noȝt to hard. In þese tweye cases þe medycyne of egremoyne ne suffiseþ