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TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

639 results from this resource . Displaying 161 to 180

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

Fore drede of quakyng of this mayd He said, "Haile!" with gret honour; "Haile be thou, quene of maidyns mo! Lord of heven and erth also Consayve thou schalt, and bere withale the Lord of myght, Hele of al monkyn.

command of the documentary sources for the biography of the poet and the text of his works. Towards his edition of The Abbey Walk, for example, Laing includes a transcript of the first stanza of a now-lost print of the

have been a factor in the composition of the first half of SEL, where George's legend occurs. The account of George in most of the extant manuscripts of SEL is a shortened version of the legend, probably derived for the

From Richard Grafton's Chronicle at Large (1569) Return to the Robin Hood Project Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition of an Erle. Excellyng principally in Archery, or shootyng, his manly courage agreeyng therunto: But

Richard II's Reign and the Peasants' Revolt: John Ball's Sermon Theme Return to Menu of TEAMS Texts Copyright Information for this edition Whan Adam dalf, and Eve span, Wo was thanne a gentilman? dug; spun; (see note) Who; nobleman;

(see note) Go To Addresses of the Commons Return To The Table of Contents The Letter of John Ball, Notes THE LETTER OF JOHN BALL (STOW): NOTES In his A Summarye of the Chronicles of Englande (London: T. Marshe, 1570)

ofRichard Rolle, p. 35. 3 On the development of these correspondences, see Bloomfield, Seven Deadly Sins, pp. 83–104. 4 For an example of a lyric contrasting the seven blood-sheddings with the seven sins, see C. Brown, Religious Lyrics

a church of a monastery. 2874 Seynt William, shrine in York Minster of William Fitzherbert, Archbishop ofYork (d. 1154). 2881 meynteyn, maintain. 2884 disesyn, trouble. 2885 apere, appear. 2885-86 Erchebischop of Yorke, Henry Bowet, Archbishop ofYork from 1407

Geoffrey of Monmouth's Auguselus, a king of Scotland, son of Bryadens, grandson of Igerne, and brother of Lot and Urien. He was, like Lot, an enemy of Arthur who later became an ally. 297 The vernacle (the relic of Veronica)

God of batayll God of wysdom Goddesse of rychesse God of colde Goddesse of corne God of love Goddesse of wysdom the variaunt Goddesse God of shepardes Goddesse of frute God of the see Goddesse of batayll or of harneyse

motion of the soul toward the enjoyment of God for His own sake, and the enjoyment of one's self and of one's neighbor for the sake of God; but 'cupidity' is a motion of the soul toward the enjoyment of

Of king or of conquerourcrowned in erthe, Of countenaunce, of corage,of cruel lates, The comlyest of knighthoodthat under Crist lives! He may be spoken in dispensdespiser of silver, That no more of gold givesthan of grete stones, No more

Geoffrey of Monmouth's Auguselus, a king of Scotland, son of Bryadens, grandson of Igerne, and brother of Lot and Urien. He was, like Lot, an enemy of Arthur who later became an ally. 297 The vernacle (the relic of Veronica)

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 26 April 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=richard%20of%20york&sr=te&st=160