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TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

955 results from this resource . Displaying 141 to 160

text is constructed from Percy's folio and, where the folio pages are torn, the 1786 English Archer version, as follows: Percy, lines 11-78, 95-126; English Archer, lines 1-10, 79-94, 127-46; editorial linking is provided in lines 42-43 and 97-98. 3

it functions as a bridge between Old and New Testament narratives and the Old and New Laws. The psalms were often thus interpreted as a "between" text, widely considered to have all of the Old and New within (or between)

Theory and Modern Performance," p. 28. 13 Ramsey, Chivalric Romances, p. 213. Both Mehl (Middle English Romances, p. 114) and Pearsall (OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, p. 265) call it a burlesque; Thomas Cooke is more wary when he

Harley 941). B is written in long lines with the English line as the first half and the Latin as the second. The English half-lines rhyme with the next English half-line, and the Latin with the Latin, in couplets. Next

who knocks doors off their hinges with his head, is a "stout carl." Carl is a cognate of the OldEnglish churl, a word meaning the opposite of "noble" or "gentle," and referring to someone of low estate, without rank

recognize the reference. The second title is to be taken, however, as the primary one: Pety Job. Middle English pety derives from Old French petit, and the phrase means ''little Job," in other words, an abridgement of the Job story.

North Riding (E. Browne and Browne, Two in One, p. 185). Purvis’ modernization is in fact neither Middle English nor Modern English. 77 Rogerson, “Living History,” pp. 12–19. 78 Elliott, Playing God, pp. 76–77. 79 Quoted in Eliott, Playing God,

are not for their purpose, and litle or nothing is in thes daies printed in English that is proper for them. There were manie English bookes in olde time whereof thoughe they have some, yet they want manie. And thereuppon

Jennifer, ed. Of Love and Chivalry: An Anthology of Middle English Romance. London: Everyman, 1992. Pp. 231-65. [Uses Cambridge Ff.2.38.] French, Walter Hoyt and Charles B. Hale, eds. Middle English Metrical Romances. New York: Russell rpt. Burt Franklin, 1960), for

The English Church and the Continent in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries, pp. 180- 81n184; Lapidge, ed., Anglo-Saxon Litanies of the Saints. For medieval calendars listing Scholastica's feast day, see Wormald, ed., English Kalendars before A.D. 1100 and English Benedictine

English, but in this context is more likely to be the former. HOMILY 18, SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT: TEXTUAL NOTES Abbreviations: MED: Middle English Dictionary; Nevanlinna: Nevanlinna, The Northern Homily Cycle; NHC: Northern Homily Cycle; OE: OldEnglish; OI:

[A Petition to Jupiter] Shut in a narrower cell and in a stronger tower Than Acrisius shut Danäe in of old Is the beautiful lady that I adore As my god of the earthly paradise. Argus is seated on a

EXPLANATORY NOTES Abbreviations: CA: Catena Aurea, ed. Newman; MED: Middle English Dictionary; NHC: Northern Homily Cycle; NIMEV: The New Index of Middle English Verse, ed. Boffey and Edwards; OE: OldEnglish; PL: Patrologia Latina, ed. Migne; Tubach: Index Exemplorum, ed.

the Magi and Slaughter of the Innocents plays (S 2:476). The topos of the sacrificial firstborn appears repeatedly in the Old Testament. It appears first with Abra­ham's offering of Isaac found in Genesis 22:1–14. It is significant that the angel

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

and literary contexts. For these treatments, see Woolf, English Religious Lyric, p. 346; Turville-Petre, "‘Summer Sunday'," pp. 7–9; Tristram, Figures of Life and Death, pp. 164–66; Pearsall, OldEnglish and Middle English Poetry, pp. 185, 250; Fein, "Early Thirteen-Line Stanza,"

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 28 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sr=te&st=140