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870 results from this resource . Displaying 141 to 160

Libraries Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file.Lai de l'oiselet -- Translations -- Early works to 1800.English poetry -- Middle English, 1100-1500 -- Early works to 1800.French poetry -- Translations into English -- Early works to 1800.

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to the ground And they gun for to fle fro the en¦glishmen for to saue ther lifes: ¶And when the english kna∣ues saw the scomfiture and the scottis fall fast to the ground they priked ther mastres horse with the

eue. In the yere of the Incarnacion of our lord Ihū crist a .M.CCC.xxxij: ¶And while this doyng lastid the English pages toke the pilfry of the Scottis yt wer killed eu{er}y man that he myght take with out ony

the mynster of Teukesburi worsshipfully is beried And lastyng this pestilence ye pope at the instance & prayer of a english Cardinall graunted to all pepull that died in englond that wer sori & repentant for ther sinnys and also

yen and his hede smyten of & ye body quartired and sent vn to iiij. tounes: and his hede set on london brigge ¶And in the xiij. yere of kyng Henris regne tho died sir Iohn̄ Beauford the erle

ther for the kyng. wherfor the duke of Burgoyn the wich had bene long english sworn. for soke our partie and re∣tourned frensh by the meyn of the forsaid legat and made a pees with the frensh kyng resauyng of

keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of

keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of

keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of

in your Courte ful noble knyghtes bothe of old & yonge And therfor by myn aduys ye shal chese half of the old and half of the yonge / whiche be the old said kyng Arthur / Syre said kynge

the lord stood an old man clothed in a surples in lykenes of a preest / Syr said syr Percyuale ye be welcome / god kepe yow sayd the good man / Sir sayd the old man of whens be

and trees renewen a man and woman / and in lyke wy∣se louers callen ageyne to their mynde old gentilnes and old seruyse and many kynde dedes that were forgeten by neclygen∣ce / For lyke as wynter rasure doth alway

Iobile{us} outher Iubile{us} the yer of grace & is ordeined the / L yere· For oth was tho fyfty yere old For abraham that was connyng in the craft of knowleche of the planettes and sterres knewe that the temprure

was vnder ogiges the kyng that renued the cyte Atthen and bilde Elensis ¶ This yere Iacob four score yere old and enleuen begate Ioseph on rathel / Petrus 74: Whan the fourten yere were doo in the whiche Iacob

yere old he ledde the folk of Israel out of egypt in the same day of the yere that Iacob & his childer entred in to egypte whan Isrl̄ went out of egypte the mone was .xv· dayes old. and

and with ynne that is to menynge from the children of two yere olde to the children of one nyght old ¶ Amonge the whiche one of his owne children was slayne that was parauenture take to norysshyng But methodius

were a wretchyd shame / that a new co∣myng shold put old landesman of her place / That is not plesing to god that graunted the place to the old woner / nowther a good man aloweth it not that

And god shall sende grace and influenceThe to encrease and thy possessyonSuffre no furfetis in thy hous at nyghteWarre of reresouers. and of grete excesseOf noddyng hedys / and of candell lyghteOf slouth at morow & slombryng IdylnesseWhiche of

On euery boughe the birdes herde I syngeWith voys of aungellis in her armonyeSom̄e besied them their birdes forth to bringeThee litil conyes to their playe gan hyeAnd further al aboute I gan aspyeThe dredeful Xoo the buk the

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