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The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse icon

The Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse

342 results from this resource . Displaying 301 to 320

That Jonah was the son of the widow of Zarephath is in the Midrash Yalqût (a legendary Commentary on the Old Testament, called Yalqût) to the book Jonah , quoted from the Talmud of Jerusalem .—A. Neubauer. (the widow of

What is þe material chirche wiþ hir honourmentis/ Capitulum . VII m .. The secounde chirche dyuerse from þis.̉ is comyng togiddir of good & yuel/ in a place þat is halowid.̉ fer from worldi occupacioun / for þere

auhte beo more. Wel longe ich habbe child ibeo. a werke and eke on dede. Þah ich beo of wynter old. to yong ich am on rede. Vnned lif ich habbe ilad. and yet me þinkþ ich lede. Hwenne ich

XV . The Proverbs of Alfred . TEXT II. [ From Wright ' s print in ' Reliquiæ Antiquæ, ' and Kemble ' s in his ' Dialogue of Salomon and Saturnus. ' ] 1. At Siforde setin kinhis

in this sentence, the of v. 10 being certainly a veil . Veils are also several times mentioned in the Old Testament. See Kitto , Cycl. Bibl. Lit., s. v. Veil . was only the heer of wommennys heed vnschorn,

politik gouernaunce vsid and had in the clergie of the chirche now being. Certis no text or processe of the old lawe can be founde forto in eny worth sowne aȝens this bifore rehercid politik gouernaunce of ouerte and netherte

. to waxe sori ffor þat he hedde herd . sikerli A Noþur tyme . bi fel þis cas An old Mon he saiȝ . w t ariueled fas. þat croked backed . was also And longe teþ . hedde

kepere of the Celle The reule of seint Maure / or of seint Beneit / By cause that it was old / and som del streit / This ilke Monk / leet olde thynges pace And heeld / after the

was kepere of the selle The reule of seynt Maur / & of seynt benyght Be cause that it was old & sumdel streyt This ilke monk let olde thynge pace And held aftyr the newe world the space He

þis lord was keper of þe selle The Reule of sent Maure or of seint Beneit By-cause þat it was old and somdel streit This ilke monk leet olde þinges pace And held after þe newe world þe space He

þat folk i-saiȝ, On of is freond for godes loue : a lomb him ȝef a dayȝ. Þis lomb wolde old and ȝoung : al dai neiȝ him beo And maken with him Ioye i-nouȝ : ȝwanne it him miȝhte

kun he was þe betere Man : þar-of nis no doute: And natheles he was, ich wene : þritti ȝer old neiȝh Are hee ouȝt muche of ore louerd wuste : oþer are he him muche iseiȝh. For ore louerd

þat I haue seyd bifore / that is to seye / þat they be trewe / wise / and of old experience / [ 2360 ] And werk nat alwey in euery nede / by o conseillour allone / for

full low, As he ne might hys lymmys weld; Kepit he no bugle blowe; Wele he semyd As he were old, For-thy ne couth hym no man knowe. The kinge stode on a toure on highte, Sir Evway [n ]

so eny lylye flour so rose red wes his colour He wes feyr & eke bold ant of fyftene wynter old Nis non his yliche in none kinges ryche tueye feren he hadde þat he wiþ him ladde alle richemenne

þou be! Þi gude prayers payes me. " And ane oþer tyme scho apered than In þe kyrk tyl an old man. Nach 164 fehlen deutlich einige Verse. . . . . . Many pouere men he saw, Bot nan

& put mekill of his myrth owai. & als he went a noþer way, He met a man, was wonder old, Croked and cumberd, koghand for cold, Lame he was in lith and lim, With nese dropand & eghen dym;

chidyng wyues / maken men to flee Out of hir owene houses / a benedicitee What eyleth / swich an old man for to chide ¶ Thow seyst þat we wyues / wol oure vices hide Til we be fast

bodyes yet to nyght Ne se ye nat this honurable knyght By cause allas / that he is blynd and old Hi s owene man / shal make hym Cokewold Lo heere he sit the lechour in the tree Now

wolde abyde And this was / as thise bookes me remembre The colde / frosty seson of Decembre Phebus wax old / and hewed lyk laton That in his hoote declynacion Shoon as the burned gold / with stremes brighte

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 5 May 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?ct=lm&kw=old%20english%20hexateuch&sr=pv&st=300