e
co{m}mune
loue of alle
?
?
Chaucer - Boethius
at he
ne constreyned[e] hem nat eftesones in to roundenesse
enclined ? e ? inges ? {a}t ben now continued by stable
ordinaunce. ? ei sholde deperten from hir welle. ? at is 4156
to sein from hir bygynnynge {and} failen. ? at is to sein
to{ur}nen in to nau? t.
[Sidenote: This love is common to all things, and all things tend
to good; so, urged by this, they all revert to that First Cause
that gave them being. ]
? ? is is ?
e co{m}mune loue of alle
? inges. {and} alle ? i{n}ges axen to be holden by ? e fyn of
good. For ellys ne my? ten ? ei nat lasten yif ? ei ne 4160
come nat eftesones a? eine by loue retourned to ? e cause
? at ha? ? euen he{m} beynge. ? at is to seyn to god.
ne constreyned[e] hem nat eftesones in to roundenesse
enclined ? e ? inges ? {a}t ben now continued by stable
ordinaunce. ? ei sholde deperten from hir welle. ? at is 4156
to sein from hir bygynnynge {and} failen. ? at is to sein
to{ur}nen in to nau? t.
[Sidenote: This love is common to all things, and all things tend
to good; so, urged by this, they all revert to that First Cause
that gave them being. ]
? ? is is ?
e co{m}mune loue of alle
? inges. {and} alle ? i{n}ges axen to be holden by ? e fyn of
good. For ellys ne my? ten ? ei nat lasten yif ? ei ne 4160
come nat eftesones a? eine by loue retourned to ? e cause
? at ha? ? euen he{m} beynge. ? at is to seyn to god.