e
bytydynge
of ?
Chaucer - Boethius
ing be.
[Sidenote: So also when I know that an event shall come to pass,
it must needs happen. ]
{and} eke ? at whan I haue knowe ? at any ? i{n}ge shal
bitiden so byhoue? it by necessite ? {a}t ? ilk[e] same
? ing bytide.
[Sidenote: The event, therefore, of a thing foreseen must befall. ]
so folwe? it ? an ? at ?
e bytydynge of ? e 4512
? inge Iwist by-forn ne may nat ben eschewed.
[Sidenote: Lastly, if a person judge a thing to be different to
what it is--this is not knowledge, but a false opinion of it, and
far from the true knowledge. ]
? And
at ? e last[e] yif ? at any wy? t wene a ? ing to ben o? er
weyes ? an it is. it nys nat oonly vnscience. but it is deceiuable
oppiniou{n} ful diuerse {and} fer fro ? e so? e of 4516
science.
[Sidenote: So also when I know that an event shall come to pass,
it must needs happen. ]
{and} eke ? at whan I haue knowe ? at any ? i{n}ge shal
bitiden so byhoue? it by necessite ? {a}t ? ilk[e] same
? ing bytide.
[Sidenote: The event, therefore, of a thing foreseen must befall. ]
so folwe? it ? an ? at ?
e bytydynge of ? e 4512
? inge Iwist by-forn ne may nat ben eschewed.
[Sidenote: Lastly, if a person judge a thing to be different to
what it is--this is not knowledge, but a false opinion of it, and
far from the true knowledge. ]
? And
at ? e last[e] yif ? at any wy? t wene a ? ing to ben o? er
weyes ? an it is. it nys nat oonly vnscience. but it is deceiuable
oppiniou{n} ful diuerse {and} fer fro ? e so? e of 4516
science.