Þe liflade of St. JulianaThomas Oswald Cockayne |
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Page 8
... Reeve . He pro- Rome , that is , High Reeve . As soon as he heard this , cured this dignity from the em- he procured from the emperor that he should grant him peror ; to be reeve , as that which he had desired ; and he , as man loved ...
... Reeve . He pro- Rome , that is , High Reeve . As soon as he heard this , cured this dignity from the em- he procured from the emperor that he should grant him peror ; to be reeve , as that which he had desired ; and he , as man loved ...
Page 9
... Reeve . He , as soon as he had heard pis , pro- cured from be emperor þat he should grant him all pat he would , and so ordered pat , as man would have it þen , he was led about in a chariot upon four wheels , and drawn prough pe town ...
... Reeve . He , as soon as he had heard pis , pro- cured from be emperor þat he should grant him all pat he would , and so ordered pat , as man would have it þen , he was led about in a chariot upon four wheels , and drawn prough pe town ...
Page 10
... reeve love . " When the reeve heard this , he became very wroth , her father , who and called her father , and began to tell him how his were true , he daughter drew him on from day to day , and after he over to Eleusius thought to have ...
... reeve love . " When the reeve heard this , he became very wroth , her father , who and called her father , and began to tell him how his were true , he daughter drew him on from day to day , and after he over to Eleusius thought to have ...
Page 11
... reeve heard pis answer , he began to be very wrad , and called her faper for , and began to tell him what a word she had sent him , after he supposed he had done all þat she demanded . Africanus her faper wondered at it much , and began ...
... reeve heard pis answer , he began to be very wrad , and called her faper for , and began to tell him what a word she had sent him , after he supposed he had done all þat she demanded . Africanus her faper wondered at it much , and began ...
Page 18
... reeve in Rome ; and he shall ( cause thee to ) perish , and bewray thee after his will with torments of every kind . " " Yea , " quoth this maiden , " that may Christ rule ; for ye can do naught to me but what he will permit you , to ...
... reeve in Rome ; and he shall ( cause thee to ) perish , and bewray thee after his will with torments of every kind . " " Yea , " quoth this maiden , " that may Christ rule ; for ye can do naught to me but what he will permit you , to ...
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azein belial beon bigon bileaue blessed buhen burh bute Cambridge Canterbury Tales Chaucer College crift deore devil drihtin Early English edited Eleusius F. J. Furnivall faper fchulde feader feng feoluen forto fune fwide godd godef godes habbe hali headene hefde hell Henry heouene hire hiſ honden hwet iboren ichulle ihesu John Juliana lauerd Leaf leafdi LIBRARY Lord luue luuie Lydgate mahte maiden makede Manchester mare Maximian mihti muchel nawt neauer pinen pis maide Poems Prof purh quod quoth reeve reue ſchal sede Society Street ſwa ſwide Texts thee thou W. W. Skeat wende weole weren wið wummon wurche zef þu þah þat tu þat þe þeir þem þen þer þet þey þif þin þing þou þurh
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Page 33 - Ruyn' of a Ream'; The Image of Ypocresye, AD 1533; Against the Blaspheming English Lutherans and the Poisonous Dragon Luther; The Spoiling of the Abbeys; The Overthrowe of the Abbeys, a Tale of Robin Hoode; De Monasteriis Dirutis.
Page 30 - Manuscripts are wanted, and it is hardly too much to say that every line of Chaucer contains points that need reconsideration. The founder's proposal is to begin with The Canterbury Tales, and give of them (in parallel columns in Royal 4to) six of the best imprinted Manuscripts known.
Page 13 - Society, which constitutes full membership, is £2 2s. a year for the annual publications, from 1921 onwards, due in advance on the 1st of JANUARY, and should be paid by Cheque, Postal Order, or Money Order, crost 'National Provincial Bank Limited,
Page 31 - Doctor's, Pardoner's. Wife of Bath's, Friar's, and Summoner's Tales, in 6 parallel Texts from the MSS above named, with the remaining 13 coloured drawings of Tellers of Tales, after the originals in the Ellesmere MS, and with Specimens of the Variations of 30 MSS in the Doctor-Pardoner Link.
Page 34 - LANEHAM'S Letter : Whearin part of the entertainment untoo the Queenz Majesty at Killingworth Castl, in Warwik Sheer in this Soomerz Progress .1575. is signified; from a freend officer attendant in the Court, unto hiz freend, a Citizen and Merchaunt of Londen.
Page 32 - Cryseyde with Boccaccio's Filostrato, with a Translation of all Passages used by Chaucer, and an Abstract of the Parts not used, by W. Michael Rossetti, Esq., and with a print of the Troi/lus from the Harleian MS 3943.
Page 31 - The Cronycle made by Chaucer,' both from MSS written by Shirley, Chaucer's contemporary. XXIV. A One-Text Print of Chaucer's Minor Poems, being the best Text from the Parallel-Text Edition, Part I, containing, I. The Dethe of Blaunche the Duehesse, II.
Page 33 - Douce, &c., and to print Ballads from MSS, and books illustrating Ballad-History. The Ballad Society books are printed in demy 8vo, like those of the Early English Text Society, and the Percy Folio (but on toned paper for the sake of the Woodcuts), and also in super-royal 8vo, on Whatman's eighty-shilling ribbed paper. The subscription for the demy 8vos is One Guinea a year ; that for the royal ribbed papers Three Guineas. The subscriptions date from January 1, 1868.
Page 31 - XV. The Man of Law's, Shipman's, and Prioress's Tales, with Chaucer's own Tale of Sir Thopas, in 6 parallel Texts from the MSS above named, and 10 coloured drawings of Tellers of Tales, after the originals in the Ellesmere MS . (Six-Text, Part III.) XVI.
Page 31 - Tale of Gamelyn, in 6 parallel Texts. (Six-Text, Part II.) The issue for 1871, in the First Series, is, XV.