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TEAMS Middle English Texts Series

116 results from this resource . Displaying 21 to 40

for ypocrisie, and ve for your leccherie. Whan the fift angel blew, ther was a pit opend, Ther rose smotheryng smoke and breses therinne. Alle thei weren lich horsis araied in to bataile, Thei stongen as scorpioun, and hadden mannis

known; (see note) (see note) because; tender extremely governance Will; obedience expression wholly because dissemble kept strictly silent; escape concealed smoke hidden discover let no one wonder gain reach; (see note) by; assault ponders see; an early season contrives cruel

teres wepyng Of synful that withouten styntyng Shul wepe ever as seyth the booke, What for sorow and what for smoke What for coolde and what for heete That thay shul suffre they shul ay grete And tho teres from

turmentid in fire and brymston in the sight of holi aungelis and in the sight of the Lombe; and the smoke of her turmentrie schal stighe up in to the world of worldis, that is, withouten ende." Of this Anticrist

(45b) M: “Domina irata, fumus, et ratta, patella perforata damnum sunt in casa.” [B 75ab] M: “An angry howsewyf, the smoke, the ratte, and a broken plater are often tymes unprofytable in an howse.” (N45b) (46a) S: “Pro amore dei

a glad newe aventure, Pleasaunte to every creature. Withe whiche landinge tho I woke, And found my chaumbre full of smoke, My chekes eke, unto the eares, And all my body weate of teares; And all so feble and in

open or walled places; (see note) may prevent You from knowing better speak That which rotting; (see note) (see note) smoke; (see note) [do] body; go asunder loathly compost (humus); (see note) loathsome For what reason then; (see note) proud

in heven as men shul heere And tokenes doun in erthe to loke As blood and fyur and breth of smoke. The sonne shal turne into merkenes The mone to blood and be lyghtles Er oure Lordes day shal falle

to thee. Quia desfecerunt sicut fumus dies me et ossa mea sicut cremeum arverunt.71 “For my lyve deys, lyke the smoke, Have feyled and aweywerd hyed. My bones be dryed and all thrught soke Lyke a thing that were forfryghed.”

hous and founde nothynge therinne but stynkynge smoke and a flitynge wif, he wolde sone renne oute of it. Right so thi soule, whanne it fyndeth noo comfort in the silf but blak smoke of goostli blyndenesse and grete flitynge

and Northampton. 1382 Veneriens. I.e., followers of Venus. Skeat compares CT III.609. 1392 sote of the smoke. Skeat suggests the soot of the smoke of the fire prepared for the sacrificed ox and cites Proverbs 7.22, "bos ductus ad uictimam"

that was so evyl that he slewe his broder Abel, for as moche as the smoke of his tithes went strayt unto heven, and the smoke and fume of the tythes of Caym went dounward upon the erthe. And how

sharp reeds and brambles of the marshland, set fire to part of it so that, driven by the wind, the smoke and flames surged up against the king's camp. Spreading for as far as two furlongs, the fire ran hither

And wynges bitere with to bete. As a lyoun he hadde fet, And his tail was long and gret. The smoke com of his nose awai Ase fer out of a chimenai. The knyght and squiers he had torent, Man

Genesis 4:4–5), a detail that fits well with the choking smoke of dramatic tradition (see, e.g., Towneley 2.277–92, where Cain’s offering refuses to burn and only coughs up thick smoke). Stern has suggested that the line be emended to read

that sofyrryd the Juys Hym crucyfye; And schew opynly that this fantastyk spere Is no thing materyal, but as the smoke of a fere." And noght soner this word was spokyn, But this spere was vanyschyd and brokyn. And noght

offer him anything else 94 spiced wine; Portuguese 95 There that fiend fills himself, to try when you please 96 smoke; went; quickest 97 Those who are roasted on spits in the field and broken with your hands 98 haired;

offer him anything else 94 spiced wine; Portuguese 95 There that fiend fills himself, to try when you please 96 smoke; went; quickest 97 Those who are roasted on spits in the field and broken with your hands 98 haired;

offer him anything else 94 spiced wine; Portuguese 95 There that fiend fills himself, to try when you please 96 smoke; went; quickest 97 Those who are roasted on spits in the field and broken with your hands 98 haired;

offer him anything else 94 spiced wine; Portuguese 95 There that fiend fills himself, to try when you please 96 smoke; went; quickest 97 Those who are roasted on spits in the field and broken with your hands 98 haired;

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"Results" Manuscripts Online (www.manuscriptsonline.org, version 1.0, 28 March 2024), https://www.manuscriptsonline.org/search/results?kw=smoke&sr=te&st=20