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TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

116 results from this resource . Displaying 1 to 20

of all the nacion -- To love yow but a lytyll is myne entent. The swert hath y-swent yow, the smoke hath yow shent; I trowe ye have be layde opon som kylne to dry. Ye do me so moche

and invyolate From al disceytes and speches inornate, Or countenaunce, whiche shal be to dispyse: No fyre make and no smoke wol aryse!" The fourth questyon: What mayden may Be called clene in chastyté? The fourth clerke answered: "Whiche alway

MS: and mayne. 96-98 See the Wife of Bath's version of the adage: Thow seyst that droppyng houses, and eek smoke, And chidyng wyves maken men to flee Out of hir owene houses; a, benedicitee! (III[D]278-80) Compare also The Tale

all the angels. 117 smoke. The Coventry dramatic records identify a fire at hellmouth in the Drapers’ Doomsday play (REED: Coventry, p. 478), while the Anglo-Norman Adam directs the devils in hell to “make a great smoke [fumum magnum] to

not, or thou wyt the sothe; For wemen in wrath they can noght hyde, But soone they can reyse a smoke. "Nor, sone, be not jellows, y thee pray, For yf thou falle yn yelesye, Let not thy wyfe wyt

fast did he lay it on him, With a passionate fury and eyre, At every stroke he made him to smoke, As if he had been all on a fire. O then into a fury the stranger he grew And

Glossing the pit that opens when the fifth angel blows his trumpet (Revelations 9), Daw applies figurative exegesis: The smorthering smoke is your dymme doctrine, That flieth out from the flawmes of the develis malice, That troublith and blindith the

lamb) and Cayme, the latter being unsatisfactory (wheat, in the Towneley play involving the worst sheaves, which create a noxious smoke), God’s reaction to the sacrifices, and Cayme’s murder of Abell, traditionally in English iconography with the jawbone of an

Were he bryneth in helle fyre.” He lede hym to a comly hylle; The erth opynd and he in yede. Smoke and fyer gan ther oute welle, And many saules glowand in glede. Ther he saw many a sore turmente,

on of, said he was one of. 61 closyd, enclosed; hud, hid. 62 for men sen smok, since people saw smoke. 62-63 thei wendon for to a fowndon, they supposed they had found. 63 dyggon, dug down. 64 brekyn, broke.

early drama, see Butterworth, Theatre of Fire, especially “Fireworks, Wildmen and Flaming Devils" (pp. 21–36), and “Fireworks as Light, Sound, Smoke and Heat" (pp. 37–54), which includes some discussion of gunpowder’s effects in the N-Town Doomsday Play (pp. 12, 28,

shul thenne upon hem goon And trede faste with her feet and toon And threste hem doun in hete and smoke As seyth the holy mon thus in his boke, Vadent et uenient super eos demones horribiles.10 Ful grysly develes

ever more. Compare lines 101–04 to PC, lines 6637–44. 105 Ther is ever smoke and stynke imonge. Compare PC line 6748: “And that sal be menged with smoke and stynk.” 106 And derknes more than ever was here. Compare PC

response graciously said Fellow-servant one mortal life Wherefore; tent urge would have given burnt ran sheepfold; (t-note) burn shining Before smoke Prostrate midday (the sixth hour) earth; (t-note) herdsmen decided to carry him; (t-note) returned [to his senses]; (t-note) recovered;

than any other, but is again restored by calling God's name. The next torment is the house of fire and smoke. In a recurring motif, the devils tempt Owain to go back, but he perseveres and observes souls in molten

Mark 14:3. 205 blotned. Small notes: “From blote, to dry, hence the well known word ‘bloater,’ a herring dried in smoke" (p. 176). 207–10 The idea that Mary’s ointment is the same as that which she used in her earlier

to wage battle against twenty English ships. A violent combat ensues during which the English set up a curtain of smoke before boarding Eustache's vessel. They cut off Eustache's head and the battle is lost (2266-2305). The romance ends with

is byrnand bryght. 1328. “And the vertu sall I thee tell, how yt sall be beld to yow bathe: The smoke therof and als the smell with reke that sall ryse up full rath, May dryfe owt all the dewls

That was bothe gret and hye. Theron he hard a delfoll crye. Alle that ton syde was semand Full of smoke and fyr brennand; That was bothe darke and wan And stank of pyche and brymston. On that todur syde,

see. 241. When Josue agayn can loke unto the cyté styfe of stone, He saw thor fyre and full grett smoke and sparkes fleand full gud one. To his men then he undertoke that that cyté to them was tone.

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