746
Reson and Sensuallyte, 4611 et seq.:
the knowleching
Of the heven and his meving
And also of the sake see,
And eke what thing it mighte be,
Why the food, as clerkys telle
Floweth with his wawes felle,
And after that the ebbes sone
Floweth the concours of the Mone.
747
Ibid., 4748 et seq.:
Thogh yt were as mortal
As horryble andJoule also
As is the paleys of Pluto,
And as fill of blak derkenesse,
Of sorwe, and of wrechchidnesse,
Yet finaly, how ever it bee
I shal assayen and go see…
It semeth a maner destiny.
748
Ibid., 150:
made him faire and fresh of hewe
As a mayde in hir beaute
That shal of newe wedded be…
749
Ibid., 357 et seq.:
Ther was wrought in portreyture
The resemblance and the figure
Of alle that unto God obeyes,
And exemplane of у deyes
Full longe afom or they weren wrought
Compassed in divine thought;
For this Lady, freshest of hewe,
Werketh ever and forgeth newe
Day and night in her ement
Weving in her gamement
Thinges divers jul habounde,
That she be nat nakedfounde.
751
Pastime of Pleasure, ed. W. E. Mead, E. E. T. S., 1928, 48, 1163, 1373.
752
Ibid., 1389:
They Jayne no fables pleasaunt and coverte
But spend their tyme in vainfull vanyte
Makynge balades of fervent amite.
754
Ibid., 2985.
755
Ibid., 40.
757
Ibid., 260 et seq.:
By the way there ly in wayte
Gyauntes grete dyffygured of nature —
But behonde them a grate see there is
Beyonde which see there is a goodly lande
Moostfull of fruyte, replete with Joye and bliss
— Of ryght fyne golde appereth all the sande.
758
Ibid., 155:
I same come rydynge in a valayeferre
A goodly lady envyroned aboute
With tongues ofjyre as bryght as ony sterre.
759
Ibid., 326:
I came to a dale.
Beholdynge Phebus declynynge low and pale,
With my grehoundes in thefayre twylight I sate me downe…
760
Ibid., 5618:
And on his noddle derkely flamynge
Was sette Satume pale as ony leed.
761
Ibid., 5748:
Eternity in afayre mbyte vesture…
762
Ibid., 4648:
We came unto a manoyr place
Moted aboute under a mood syde.
«Alight», she sayd, «For by Hght longe space
In payne and mo you dyde ever abyde;
— After an ebbe there cometh a ftomnynge tyde».
763
Ibid., 4499.
764
Ibid., 62.
765
Ibid., 116.
766
Ibid, 365.
767
Ibid, 1956.
768
Ibid., 4312: Му greyhoundes leped and ту stede dyde sterte…
769
Ibid, 4433.
770
Ibid, 603:
By worde the worlde was made oryginally:
The Hye King sayde: it was made incontinent.
771
Ibid., 1857.
772
Ibid., 2203.
773
Ibid., 2368.
774
Ibid., 2298: Andfor your sake become adventurous…
775
Ibid., 1768.
776
Ibid., 1583–1603:
She commaunded her mynstrelles ryght to play
Mamours, the swete and the gentyll daunce.
With La Belle Purcell, that was fayre and gaye,
She me recommaunded with all pleasaunce
To daunce true mesures without varyaunce.
O Lorde God! how glad than was I
So for to daunce with my swete lady! —
For the fyre kyndled and waxed more and more,
The dauncing blewe it with her beaute clere.
My hert sekened and began waxe sore;
A mynute six homes, and six homes a у ere
O thought it was.
777
Ibid., 5474:
О mortallfolk, you may beholde and se
How I lye here, somtyme a myghty knyght.
The ende of Joy e and all prospentie
Is dethe at last through his course and myght;
After the day there cometh the derke nyght,
For though the day be never so longe
At last the belles ryngeth to evensonge.
779
Ibid., 5604: Infenyte I am. Nothing can me mate.
780
Ibid., 5635:
Shall not I, Time, dystroye bothe se and lande,
The sonne and топе and the sterres alle?
781
Ibid., 5753: Of heaven quene and hell empres.
782
См. примеч. на с.357.
783
Example of Virtue, поэма напечатана (в орфографии, приближенной к современной) в изд. Dunbar Anthology. Ed. By E. Arber, London, 1901. P. 217 et seq.
784
Ibid., stanza 179:
Ко man this bndge may overgo
But he be pure without negligence
And stedfast in God's belief also.
785
Ibid., stanza 182:
At the upper end of the hall above
He sat still and did not remove,
Girded with willows…
786
Ibid., stanza 192.
788
Ibid., stanza 71:
Methought she was of marvellous beauty