slakke {and}
delitable sou{n} of strenges how ?
delitable sou{n} of strenges how ?
Chaucer - Boethius
For how so ?
at 1848
men han dyuerse sentences {and} discordyng algates men
accordyn alle in lyuynge ? e ende of goode.
[Linenotes:
1823 _perfourny_--p{er}forme
1825 _ha? _--MS. ha? e
_none_--non
1827 _? ilk_--thilke
1828 _goode_--good
1829 _foule_--fowl
1830 _al_--welneyh alle
1831 _trauaille_--trauaylen
_au? t[e]_--owhte
1832 _be_--ben
1834 _out_--owte
1835 _au? te_--owhte
1836 _al_--alle
1837 _be_--ben
_clere_--cleer
1843 _rycches_--Rychesses
1846 _goode_--good
1847 _be_--ben
1848 _grete_--gret
1849 _algates_--Allegates
1850 _goode_--good]
[Headnote:
OF NATURE'S LAWS. ]
Q{UA}NTAS RER{UM} FLECTAT.
[Sidenote: [The 2^de Met{ur}. ]]
[Sidenote: I will now sing of Nature's laws, by which the universe
is governed. ]
++IT like? me to shew[e] by subtil songe wi?
slakke {and}
delitable sou{n} of strenges how ? at nature my? ty encline? 1852
{and} flitte? gouernement? of ? inges ? {and} by
whiche lawes she p{ur}ueiable kepi? ? e grete worlde. {and}
how she bindynge restreine? alle ? ing{us} by a bonde ? at
may nat be vnbounden.
[Sidenote: [j]]
[Sidenote: The Punic lion submits to man, and dreads the keeper's
lash; yet, if he once taste blood, his savage instincts revive,
and his keeper falls a victim to his fury. ]
?
men han dyuerse sentences {and} discordyng algates men
accordyn alle in lyuynge ? e ende of goode.
[Linenotes:
1823 _perfourny_--p{er}forme
1825 _ha? _--MS. ha? e
_none_--non
1827 _? ilk_--thilke
1828 _goode_--good
1829 _foule_--fowl
1830 _al_--welneyh alle
1831 _trauaille_--trauaylen
_au? t[e]_--owhte
1832 _be_--ben
1834 _out_--owte
1835 _au? te_--owhte
1836 _al_--alle
1837 _be_--ben
_clere_--cleer
1843 _rycches_--Rychesses
1846 _goode_--good
1847 _be_--ben
1848 _grete_--gret
1849 _algates_--Allegates
1850 _goode_--good]
[Headnote:
OF NATURE'S LAWS. ]
Q{UA}NTAS RER{UM} FLECTAT.
[Sidenote: [The 2^de Met{ur}. ]]
[Sidenote: I will now sing of Nature's laws, by which the universe
is governed. ]
++IT like? me to shew[e] by subtil songe wi?
slakke {and}
delitable sou{n} of strenges how ? at nature my? ty encline? 1852
{and} flitte? gouernement? of ? inges ? {and} by
whiche lawes she p{ur}ueiable kepi? ? e grete worlde. {and}
how she bindynge restreine? alle ? ing{us} by a bonde ? at
may nat be vnbounden.
[Sidenote: [j]]
[Sidenote: The Punic lion submits to man, and dreads the keeper's
lash; yet, if he once taste blood, his savage instincts revive,
and his keeper falls a victim to his fury. ]
?