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955 results from this resource . Displaying 121 to 140

pp. 211–12, 255; Silverstein, English Lyrics, pp. 105-06 (no. 84); Greene, Early English Carols, pp. 219–20, 442 (no. 369). Modernized Editions: Sisam and Sisam, Oxford Book of Medieval English Verse, pp. 391–93 (no. 160); Davies, Medieval English Lyrics, pp. 170–71,

pp. 211–12, 255; Silverstein, English Lyrics, pp. 105-06 (no. 84); Greene, Early English Carols, pp. 219–20, 442 (no. 369). Modernized Editions: Sisam and Sisam, Oxford Book of Medieval English Verse, pp. 391–93 (no. 160); Davies, Medieval English Lyrics, pp. 170–71,

pp. 211–12, 255; Silverstein, English Lyrics, pp. 105-06 (no. 84); Greene, Early English Carols, pp. 219–20, 442 (no. 369). Modernized Editions: Sisam and Sisam, Oxford Book of Medieval English Verse, pp. 391–93 (no. 160); Davies, Medieval English Lyrics, pp. 170–71,

other resistance leaders, he may have been reconciled with the Conqueror. Gaimar suggests that he was in charge of an English contingent fighting on behalf of William in Maine, and was subsequently killed by a bunch of jealous Norman knights

poverty lies the end of my life, For a heart of stone has wicked thought; Young, you loved me, and old, you have cast me off. I am spent and in misery, Servant of that from which you formerly protected

Modern Language Quarterly 53 (1992), 100-25. Lawton, David. "The Diversity of Middle English Alliterative Poetry." Leeds Studies in English 20 (1989), 159-62. Pearsall, Derek. OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry. London: Routledge . The Alliterative Revival. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer,

legend which has survived in the English language" (1961, p. 88), an important link in the chain that just survives between the early distressed gentleman sagas of Eustace and Fulk and the plainer English heroes of forest resistance like Robin

26 Galpin, OldEnglish Instruments of Music, p. 166. 27 Beadle, “Medieval Drama of East Anglia,” 1:88. 28 Ralph Hanna III, quoted in Lerer, “Medieval English Literature,” p. 1253. 29 Cox and Kastan, New History of Early English Drama, p.

ADVENT: EXPLANATORY NOTES Abbreviations: Abbreviations: MED: Middle English Dictionary; NEHC: Gerould, North English Homily Collection; NHC: Northern Homily Cycle; NIMEV: The New Index of Middle English Verse, ed. Boffey and Edwards; ON: Old Norse; Tubach: Index Exemplorum, ed. Tubach; For

source, the poem is quite original in the context of English literature. The conclusion that one reaches after considering Lancelot of the Laik in the context of medieval and other English treatments of Lancelot is the same as that reached

adverb all relate literally to physical space. 18 Heffernan, “Authorship,” p. 289. 19 Spencer, English Preaching, p. 65. 20 Spencer, English Preaching, p. 73. 21 Spencer, English Preaching, p. 95. 22 Grosseteste, Epistolae, quoted in translation in Shinners and Dohar,

her (Dan. 13:8-14). The Middle English poet focuses on the oneness of their thoughts in their chamber in line 47. Whether with chere or in fere is the better reading, the poet emphasizes both the old men's lasciviousness and their

native English words wryght (lines 524, 2171; Modern English write, from OE writan) and qwyght (lines 495, 536, etc. Modern English white, from OE hwit) and French borrowings endyght (from OFr enditer) and ermyght (lines 1901, etc.; Modern English hermit,

in English Literature, ed. Jeffrey; HS: Peter Comes­tor, Historia Scholastica, cited by book and chapter, followed by Patrologia Latina column in paren­theses; K: Kalén-Ohlander edition; MED: Middle English Dictionary; NOAB: New Oxford Annotated Bible; OED: Oxford English Dictionary; OFP: Old

p. xxxv. 42 Hornstein, "Miscellaneous Romances," 1.158. 43 Guddat-Figge, Catalogue of the Manuscripts Containing Middle English Romances, p. 41. 44 Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, p. 153. 45 For more information on the historical contexts of the poem,

into Middle English in the fourteenth century, the Ancrene Wisse ("Guide for Anchoresses") written in English in the thirteenth century, and the extremely popular Meditationes vitae Christi ("Meditations on the Life of Christ") extant in several fifteenth-century English versions or

to The Legend of Good Women and to which Deschamps had referred before him (and Charles d'Orlans after, in the English poems written in his captivity, 1415-40). Knights and ladies would declare their adherence to the Flower or the Leaf

Meditations on the Life of Christ, trans. Ragusa and Green; MED: Middle English Dictionary; OED: Oxford English Dictionary; RB: Richard Beadle, ed., York Plays; REED: Records of Early English Drama; YA: Davidson and O’Connor, York Art; York Breviary: Breviarium ad

121-68 and 281-328; Eleanor Prescott Hammond, ed., English Verse between Chaucer and Surrey (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1927); Derek Pearsall, "The English Chaucerians," in Chaucer and Chaucerians: Critical Studies in Middle English Literature, ed. D. S. Brewer (London: Thomas

and later in the English court in the 1340s. Jean Froissart, 1337–140?: chronicler of the Hundred Years War and poet who served Queen Philippa at the English court 1361–68. Oton de Granson, 134?–97: knight-poet who served English royalty on and

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 29 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sr=te&st=120