This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
legend of good women | 74 |
on the other hand | 54 |
at the same time | 45 |
at the end of | 44 |
the legend of good | 39 |
in the new e | 34 |
the house of fame | 31 |
the court of love | 30 |
the end of the | 29 |
of the middle ages | 29 |
of the canterbury tales | 28 |
roman de la rose | 28 |
in edward iii he | 27 |
one of the most | 26 |
in the same year | 25 |
in the th century | 25 |
of the th century | 23 |
the prologue to the | 23 |
flower and the leaf | 22 |
the book of the | 22 |
the wife of bath | 22 |
book of the duchess | 22 |
seems to have been | 22 |
it is clear that | 21 |
of john of gaunt | 21 |
the flower and the | 20 |
in the middle ages | 20 |
the author of the | 20 |
was one of the | 20 |
see note to l | 20 |
the roman de la | 19 |
see note to c | 18 |
to the legend of | 18 |
the testament of love | 18 |
in the case of | 18 |
with regard to the | 18 |
he seems to have | 18 |
the assembly of ladies | 17 |
the custody of the | 17 |
prologue to the legend | 16 |
tonge wol alway deme | 16 |
wol alway deme amis | 16 |
the temple of glas | 16 |
the same year he | 16 |
the rest of the | 16 |
as a matter of | 16 |
the use of the | 16 |
in richard ii he | 16 |
edward iii he was | 16 |
the god of love | 16 |
for the sake of | 16 |
on the part of | 15 |
romaunt of the rose | 15 |
in the prologue to | 15 |
a wikked tonge wol | 14 |
wikked tonge wol alway | 14 |
in the house of | 14 |
that is to say | 14 |
the middle of the | 14 |
in the course of | 14 |
a member of the | 14 |
trust right wel this | 14 |
of the heavenly bodies | 13 |
the name of the | 13 |
richard ii he was | 13 |
in the list of | 13 |
in the canterbury tales | 13 |
see note to p | 13 |
the fact that the | 13 |
as we have seen | 12 |
in he was appointed | 12 |
of the manor of | 12 |
he was granted the | 12 |
the cuckoo and the | 12 |
the reference is to | 12 |
in the days of | 12 |
of the fourteenth century | 12 |
cuckoo and the nightingale | 12 |
la belle dame sans | 12 |
with john of gaunt | 12 |
of one of the | 12 |
in the middle of | 12 |
on the celestial sphere | 12 |
in the sense of | 12 |
it is to be | 12 |
at a time when | 11 |
a grant of the | 11 |
justice of the peace | 11 |
side by side with | 11 |
from the fact that | 11 |
of the duke of | 11 |
a matter of course | 11 |
to john of gaunt | 11 |
in he was granted | 11 |
the end of a | 11 |
the case of the | 11 |
to the canterbury tales | 10 |
same year he was | 10 |
a large number of | 10 |
and trust right wel | 10 |
at the close of | 10 |
the duke of lancaster | 10 |
on the one hand | 10 |
of the castle of | 10 |
of the black knight | 10 |
as well as of | 10 |
romance of the rose | 10 |
in the fourteenth century | 10 |
with reference to the | 10 |
michael de la pole | 10 |
on a commission to | 10 |
at the time when | 10 |
it is probable that | 10 |
that john of gaunt | 10 |
no other example of | 10 |
of the celestial sphere | 10 |
it is easy to | 9 |
that he was a | 9 |
complaint of the black | 9 |
as well as in | 9 |
in the port of | 9 |
of the fifteenth century | 9 |
have been able to | 9 |
for the first time | 9 |
i have been able | 9 |
be found in the | 9 |
belle dame sans mercy | 9 |
see note in vol | 9 |
the testament of cresseid | 9 |
in spite of the | 9 |
of the roman de | 9 |
as it were a | 9 |
the close of the | 9 |
he was sent to | 9 |
from west to east | 9 |
the plane of the | 9 |
the order of the | 9 |
to have been a | 9 |
at the time of | 9 |
the part of the | 9 |
at the beginning of | 9 |
the romaunt of the | 9 |
the parlement of foules | 8 |
the port of london | 8 |
in the present volume | 8 |
the complaint of the | 8 |
the romance of the | 8 |
the assembly of fowls | 8 |
is said to be | 8 |
see note to ch | 8 |
at the age of | 8 |
the nature of the | 8 |
the letter of cupid | 8 |
it is remarkable that | 8 |
seem to have been | 8 |
the position of the | 8 |
is not worth a | 8 |
the latter part of | 8 |
come to an end | 8 |
to the fact that | 8 |
is one of the | 8 |
to the end of | 8 |
in accordance with the | 8 |
it must be remembered | 8 |
the lady of the | 8 |
of the house of | 8 |
the reign of henry | 8 |
in the knightes tale | 8 |
of the peace in | 8 |
in the presence of | 8 |
the duke of gloucester | 8 |
from east to west | 8 |
the sun and moon | 8 |
far as we know | 8 |
in the first place | 8 |
from the ellesmere ms | 8 |
reference is to the | 8 |
treatise on the astrolabe | 8 |
of the court of | 8 |
of the earl of | 8 |
the course of the | 8 |
john of gaunt was | 8 |
the date of the | 8 |
so far as we | 8 |
the names of the | 8 |
i know of no | 8 |
in the king granted | 8 |
it is difficult to | 7 |
the king and the | 7 |
the office of controller | 7 |
we are told that | 7 |
the king of love | 7 |
end of a line | 7 |
of the cinque ports | 7 |
the latter half of | 7 |
the praise of peace | 7 |
for the most part | 7 |
break here in th | 7 |
the greater part of | 7 |
had a grant of | 7 |
the end of his | 7 |
he was one of | 7 |
the signs of the | 7 |
the cuckoo and nightingale | 7 |
the flour of curtesye | 7 |
the celestial equator and | 7 |
during the minority of | 7 |
is clear that the | 7 |
that is to saye | 7 |
be it never so | 7 |
a break here in | 7 |
at the request of | 7 |
he was sent on | 7 |
the city of london | 7 |
on the subject of | 7 |
is said to have | 7 |
the month of may | 7 |
use of the final | 7 |
to be found in | 7 |
the hous of fame | 7 |
the minority of the | 7 |
at the opening of | 7 |
in troilus and criseyde | 7 |
as if it were | 7 |
et many a fly | 7 |
as one of the | 7 |
may be found in | 7 |
a commission to treat | 7 |
edward iii he is | 7 |
the influence of the | 7 |
it is impossible to | 7 |
the grant of a | 7 |
the king of the | 7 |
of the king and | 6 |
the center of the | 6 |
a knight of the | 6 |
mayor of london in | 6 |
was a member of | 6 |
ballad of good counsel | 6 |
that the author was | 6 |
in the man of | 6 |
towards the end of | 6 |
i do not know | 6 |
the fact that he | 6 |
order of the garter | 6 |
in the hands of | 6 |
nedeful is to be | 6 |
the poet of the | 6 |
and there is no | 6 |
been able to find | 6 |
may be said to | 6 |
john of gaunt had | 6 |
other example of the | 6 |
the back of the | 6 |
about the same time | 6 |
out in the notes | 6 |
the cause of the | 6 |
the knight of la | 6 |
see the new e | 6 |
is supposed to be | 6 |
commendation of our lady | 6 |
the passage beginning at | 6 |
the history of the | 6 |
in commendation of our | 6 |
iii he was sent | 6 |
to the king of | 6 |
book of the duch | 6 |
of the sun and | 6 |
there must have been | 6 |
the man of law | 6 |
in the book of | 6 |
and in the same | 6 |
so as i can | 6 |
it may be noted | 6 |
the way in which | 6 |
with the exception of | 6 |
by the same author | 6 |
is mentioned in the | 6 |
in the time of | 6 |
passage beginning at p | 6 |
reason to suppose that | 6 |
after the manner of | 6 |
of the earth and | 6 |
the life of the | 6 |
knight of la tour | 6 |
as has been seen | 6 |
used in the sense | 6 |
as well as the | 6 |
chaucer to have been | 6 |
prologue to the canterbury | 6 |
the esquires of the | 6 |
must have been a | 6 |
come down to us | 6 |
of the temple of | 6 |
is given in the | 6 |
as well as to | 6 |
signs of the zodiac | 6 |
it is obvious that | 6 |
in the bannatyne ms | 6 |
and ending at p | 6 |
it is true that | 6 |
clerkship of the works | 6 |
he had a grant | 6 |
received a grant of | 6 |
to my soverain lady | 6 |
in which he lived | 6 |
justices of the peace | 6 |
the knights of the | 6 |
to the court of | 6 |
minority of the heir | 6 |
in the matter of | 5 |
the king of england | 5 |
marriage of the heir | 5 |
is here used in | 5 |
in the first instance | 5 |
the spirit of the | 5 |
we must not forget | 5 |
piece of the seal | 5 |
it would have been | 5 |
example of the word | 5 |
the hands of the | 5 |
controller of the customs | 5 |
the compleynt of mars | 5 |
the later middle ages | 5 |
the description of the | 5 |
a passage in the | 5 |
at the bottom of | 5 |
the service of the | 5 |
ful fyne and orient | 5 |
of the testament of | 5 |
in comparison with the | 5 |
year he was granted | 5 |
of the city of | 5 |
is clear that he | 5 |
of fame and the | 5 |
the course of his | 5 |
in the household of | 5 |
celestial equator and the | 5 |
perhaps an error for | 5 |
connected in some way | 5 |
the opening of the | 5 |
was granted the office | 5 |
to the duke of | 5 |
esquiers de meindre degree | 5 |
the government of the | 5 |
in troilus and cressid | 5 |
the first of these | 5 |
political poems and songs | 5 |
the lands and tenements | 5 |
when the moon is | 5 |
the prince of wales | 5 |
was granted custody of | 5 |
that there is no | 5 |
it would be difficult | 5 |
and the custody of | 5 |
of palamon and arcite | 5 |
must have been written | 5 |
on account of the | 5 |
office of controller of | 5 |
as fer as i | 5 |
to treat for peace | 5 |
have no reason to | 5 |
pointed out in the | 5 |
the blinde et many | 5 |
the parliament of foules | 5 |
i can no more | 5 |
the initial letters of | 5 |
must be remembered that | 5 |
is by no means | 5 |
the sun in the | 5 |
warden of the cinque | 5 |
chaucer and his england | 5 |
in the legend of | 5 |
smaller piece of the | 5 |
of the forest of | 5 |
back of the astrolabe | 5 |
treat for peace with | 5 |
in the life of | 5 |
from the louterell psalter | 5 |
in the name of | 5 |
blinde et many a | 5 |
the list of esquiers | 5 |
to those who have | 5 |
of the wife of | 5 |
younger branch of the | 5 |
the earl of derby | 5 |
the fourteenth century the | 5 |
in the same way | 5 |
the beginning of the | 5 |
of the same year | 5 |
of the smaller piece | 5 |
the presence of the | 5 |
granted the office of | 5 |
to have been the | 5 |
king john of france | 5 |
there seems to be | 5 |
foul mote it befall | 5 |
the authoress of the | 5 |
out of the way | 5 |
in the parlement of | 5 |
daughter and heir of | 5 |
and if it be | 5 |
of the flower and | 5 |
de la pole and | 5 |
to come to the | 5 |
ii he was sent | 5 |
to the temple of | 5 |
but it is not | 5 |
with his own hand | 5 |
in some way with | 5 |
by the fact that | 5 |
the mouth of the | 5 |
tomb in westminster abbey | 5 |
of the black death | 5 |
could not have been | 5 |
he was wont to | 5 |
initial letters of the | 5 |
the character of the | 5 |
we have no reason | 5 |
to every wight that | 5 |
on the ground that | 5 |
the first book of | 5 |
in addition to the | 5 |
him to have been | 5 |
the king of france | 5 |
in the note to | 5 |
of a religious order | 5 |
seems to have had | 5 |
great circle of the | 5 |
is to be noted | 5 |
of the countess of | 5 |
it is evident that | 5 |
in suche a wyse | 5 |
as that of the | 5 |
said to have been | 5 |
the days of the | 5 |
that he was not | 5 |
is not to be | 5 |
in the assembly of | 5 |
of the custody of | 5 |
the clerkship of the | 5 |
in the service of | 5 |
is nothing els but | 5 |
tells us how he | 5 |
a more or less | 5 |
in the order of | 5 |
in the cuckoo and | 5 |
had been in the | 5 |
at length in the | 5 |
to do with the | 5 |
be said to have | 5 |
the smaller piece of | 5 |
in the temple of | 5 |
know of no other | 5 |
greater part of the | 5 |
in connection with the | 5 |
to the effect that | 5 |
with that of the | 5 |
was sent to the | 5 |
in favour of the | 5 |
appointed on a commission | 5 |
was the son of | 5 |
cardinal jacques de vitry | 5 |
if a man be | 5 |
known to have been | 5 |
the consolation of philosophy | 5 |
a part of the | 5 |
of no other example | 5 |
here used in the | 5 |
first printed by stowe | 5 |
circle of the celestial | 5 |
of the celestial equator | 5 |
of the poem in | 4 |
wherfore i wot wel | 4 |
the direction of the | 4 |
so far as i | 4 |
from this point of | 4 |
and the earth at | 4 |
the household of the | 4 |
his men at arms | 4 |
is due to the | 4 |
to be in his | 4 |
the wars of the | 4 |
or at all events | 4 |
of the peace for | 4 |
copy of jack upland | 4 |
it is necessary to | 4 |
william de beauchamp was | 4 |
business of the king | 4 |
the title of the | 4 |
to have been in | 4 |
of the later middle | 4 |
of jean de meung | 4 |
wyf of bathes tale | 4 |
the aid of the | 4 |
at a rent of | 4 |
is supposed to have | 4 |
was member of parliament | 4 |
in the face of | 4 |
center of the earth | 4 |
an obvious error for | 4 |
visible church of christ | 4 |
latter part of the | 4 |
to be or nat | 4 |
chaucer must have been | 4 |
the peace in kent | 4 |
the church of st | 4 |
it is not to | 4 |
was supposed to be | 4 |
of the knights of | 4 |
in the margin of | 4 |
on the occasion of | 4 |
the introduction to the | 4 |
grant of an annuity | 4 |
have not been able | 4 |
to some of the | 4 |
in the direction of | 4 |
in the shape of | 4 |
a good deal of | 4 |
with one of the | 4 |
has come down to | 4 |
archers in the war | 4 |
as far as the | 4 |
i give rejected spellings | 4 |
in the same poem | 4 |
the king granted to | 4 |
it seems likely that | 4 |
positions of the heavenly | 4 |
that it is not | 4 |
and archers in the | 4 |
against the celestial sphere | 4 |
the cause of his | 4 |
in the patent rolls | 4 |
for a journey to | 4 |
so that it is | 4 |
by the side of | 4 |
elsewhere in the same | 4 |
the treatise on the | 4 |
in the city of | 4 |
set in suche a | 4 |
relative positions of the | 4 |
we know that the | 4 |
of the relations between | 4 |
not been able to | 4 |
in an age of | 4 |
the philippa chaucer of | 4 |
in the days when | 4 |
in the modern sense | 4 |
the world in which | 4 |
custody of the manor | 4 |
the hue and cry | 4 |
his troilus and cressid | 4 |
in the frankeleyns tale | 4 |
chaucer may have been | 4 |
to the name of | 4 |
an allusion to the | 4 |
a matter of fact | 4 |
it is needless to | 4 |
in the latter half | 4 |
position of the sun | 4 |
the exception of the | 4 |
sergeantz des offices parvantz | 4 |
by reason of the | 4 |
is well known that | 4 |
orbit around the sun | 4 |
that the poet was | 4 |
the influence of chaucer | 4 |
was sent on the | 4 |
the altitude of the | 4 |
as if she were | 4 |
the centre of the | 4 |
hath yeven us this | 4 |
of the other planets | 4 |
the man of lawes | 4 |
as has been said | 4 |
chaucer refers to the | 4 |
offered wager of battle | 4 |
sir william de beauchamp | 4 |
the marriage of the | 4 |
would be difficult to | 4 |
custody of the castle | 4 |
it is nat nedeful | 4 |
with knife and cudgel | 4 |
there is no reason | 4 |
it ought to be | 4 |
we have seen how | 4 |
of the legend of | 4 |
commission to treat for | 4 |
they came to a | 4 |
may have been the | 4 |
by lacking and praysing | 4 |
the king and his | 4 |
the household of one | 4 |
and in his hand | 4 |
and john of gaunt | 4 |
he was a member | 4 |
and with that word | 4 |
of gold and silver | 4 |
of the collectors of | 4 |
to the first book | 4 |
it is no dread | 4 |
the right word is | 4 |
the hands of a | 4 |
of the name of | 4 |
mentioned in the same | 4 |
the tower of london | 4 |
poet of the canterbury | 4 |
he was appointed on | 4 |
and the false arcite | 4 |
springing of the day | 4 |
john of gaunt in | 4 |
iii he was paid | 4 |
of the castle and | 4 |
parson of a town | 4 |
as soon as he | 4 |
the fact that chaucer | 4 |
the end of ll | 4 |
on their way to | 4 |
in the monkes tale | 4 |
of the careers of | 4 |
this point of view | 4 |
by means of a | 4 |
the hye way to | 4 |
is one of those | 4 |
secret business of the | 4 |
in praise of chaucer | 4 |
thought to have been | 4 |
it was a greet | 4 |
latter half of the | 4 |
in his old age | 4 |
was appointed on a | 4 |
to him in the | 4 |
in the kingis quair | 4 |
a portion of the | 4 |
it will be seen | 4 |
of la tour landry | 4 |
a younger branch of | 4 |
early example of the | 4 |
of the sun in | 4 |
one of the greatest | 4 |
of a series of | 4 |
one of these was | 4 |
is clear from the | 4 |
on secret business of | 4 |
with the same sense | 4 |
what is better than | 4 |
men there ben that | 4 |
that in no wyse | 4 |
is an error for | 4 |
from the office of | 4 |
as i have sayd | 4 |
may he it not | 4 |
favour with the king | 4 |
branch of the family | 4 |
for there is no | 4 |
on the th of | 4 |
the body of the | 4 |
and ought to be | 4 |
to the conclusion that | 4 |
the description of a | 4 |
the death of the | 4 |
custody of the lands | 4 |
retained to stay with | 4 |
the craft of lovers | 4 |
it is well known | 4 |
tr o uthe in | 4 |
as if they had | 4 |
the sufferings of the | 4 |
as it had been | 4 |
there is a very | 4 |
as well as a | 4 |
poles of the heavens | 4 |
a time when the | 4 |
in the roman de | 4 |
king of the romans | 4 |
no reason to suppose | 4 |
belle dame sans merci | 4 |
in the history of | 4 |
a justice of the | 4 |
iii he was granted | 4 |
he received a grant | 4 |
the study of the | 4 |
see legend of good | 4 |
the mayor and aldermen | 4 |
years of his life | 4 |
nothing to do with | 4 |
from his tomb in | 4 |
the story of patient | 4 |
the th of april | 4 |
have been in the | 4 |
next year he was | 4 |
the circumstances of his | 4 |
to inquire into the | 4 |
the host of the | 4 |
that no man may | 4 |
of this poem is | 4 |
supposed to have been | 4 |
in a maner of | 4 |
was by this time | 4 |
every reason to believe | 4 |
griffith de la chambre | 4 |
in the right order | 4 |
be or nat to | 4 |
are pointed out in | 4 |
the time when the | 4 |
in the absence of | 4 |
half of the fourteenth | 4 |
of the romaunt of | 4 |
the th and th | 4 |
a great deal of | 4 |
early english text society | 4 |
the author of piers | 4 |
fro day to day | 4 |
man of lawes tale | 4 |
from john of gaunt | 4 |
des offices parvantz furrures | 4 |
this may be the | 4 |
the early english text | 4 |
for the love of | 4 |
the controllership of the | 4 |
to a great extent | 4 |
in richard ii confirmed | 4 |
of the thirteenth century | 4 |
the fact that his | 4 |
author of piers plowman | 4 |
the spheres of the | 4 |
a younger son of | 4 |
as a man of | 4 |
on the side of | 4 |
the loss of the | 4 |
the author of a | 4 |
a few years later | 4 |
way to the knot | 4 |
office of constable of | 4 |
household of one of | 4 |
in the next line | 4 |
and in richard ii | 4 |
son and heir of | 4 |
put it in wryting | 4 |
host of the tabard | 4 |
may be noted that | 4 |
the time of day | 4 |
with the sun in | 4 |
by reference to the | 4 |
with marriage of the | 4 |
in the reign of | 4 |
member of parliament for | 4 |
in the court of | 4 |
into the mouth of | 4 |
richard ii confirmed to | 4 |
and at the last | 4 |
see note to anelida | 4 |
see note to bk | 4 |
i have not been | 4 |
end of the year | 4 |
if it be wel | 4 |
the date of his | 4 |
of gloucester and his | 4 |
in proportion as the | 4 |
in spite of all | 4 |
or nat to be | 4 |
is an obvious error | 4 |
said to be in | 4 |
must have been in | 4 |
of the same kind | 4 |
this is the cold | 4 |
of the petty customs | 4 |
the absence of any | 4 |
it appears that the | 4 |
in the hous of | 4 |
projected against the celestial | 4 |
granted custody of the | 4 |
the list of justices | 4 |
was well acquainted with | 4 |
observer on the earth | 4 |
the citizens of london | 4 |
constable of the castle | 4 |
it may be said | 4 |
it may not be | 4 |
in one of the | 4 |
that may not be | 4 |
or wisdom of god | 4 |
the time of the | 4 |
the foot of the | 4 |
we may safely date | 4 |
was on a commission | 4 |
there can be no | 4 |
the poles of the | 3 |
with a view to | 3 |
of the spheres of | 3 |
the references are to | 3 |
many a song and | 3 |
is easy to see | 3 |
have been written before | 3 |
duke of gloucester and | 3 |
the south point of | 3 |
in the fifteenth century | 3 |
among the men to | 3 |
one and the same | 3 |
to the young king | 3 |
sense in which the | 3 |
dressed me in myn | 3 |
the expenses of himself | 3 |
of the church as | 3 |
hath so wyde for | 3 |
connection with the court | 3 |
he is mentioned as | 3 |
the story of his | 3 |
in course of time | 3 |
at the present day | 3 |
for we find him | 3 |
the last of these | 3 |
house of fame and | 3 |
of the man of | 3 |
than that of the | 3 |
in our days is | 3 |
to legend of good | 3 |
for the expenses of | 3 |
wost thou nat wel | 3 |
one of the many | 3 |
that he hath in | 3 |
called defended he tho | 3 |
to the book of | 3 |
much of what was | 3 |
at his own expense | 3 |
in he was on | 3 |
for the king and | 3 |
of the romans and | 3 |
men with whom chaucer | 3 |
in the centre of | 3 |
was appointed one of | 3 |
the minds of the | 3 |
a company of pilgrims | 3 |
it can hardly be | 3 |
the visible church of | 3 |
it would be a | 3 |
at a farm of | 3 |
certainly an error for | 3 |
and the assembly of | 3 |
petition of the commons | 3 |
it is a greet | 3 |
as is well known | 3 |
to exercise the office | 3 |
at a loss for | 3 |
and the rest of | 3 |
paid ten pounds for | 3 |
womankind in western europe | 3 |
the round tower of | 3 |
the fourth part of | 3 |
to a place of | 3 |
annuity of ten pounds | 3 |
court of love to | 3 |
of the parliament of | 3 |
in no wyse i | 3 |
the poem of the | 3 |
in the introduction to | 3 |
and that is good | 3 |
in the new english | 3 |
and whom he hath | 3 |
parson in the prologue | 3 |
was paid ten pounds | 3 |
than i dressed me | 3 |
of some of these | 3 |
to any of the | 3 |
are one or two | 3 |
at the head of | 3 |
ben as proude as | 3 |
there is no such | 3 |
same year he had | 3 |
house built of stone | 3 |
the period of the | 3 |
ii confirmed to him | 3 |
the examples of the | 3 |
on their own account | 3 |
seems every reason to | 3 |
the large majority of | 3 |
many a lecherous lay | 3 |
can hardly be said | 3 |
well as of the | 3 |
for the maintenance of | 3 |
the copy in ms | 3 |
too much to say | 3 |
of the english language | 3 |
the th century from | 3 |
able to find out | 3 |
a word of four | 3 |
appear to have been | 3 |
have ye not seen | 3 |
all the inner spheres | 3 |
authoress of the flower | 3 |
have been obliged to | 3 |
ye witen never whether | 3 |
at arms and archers | 3 |
of the composition of | 3 |
mine host of the | 3 |
had by this time | 3 |
year he was given | 3 |
of edward iii and | 3 |
the north and south | 3 |
by a maner of | 3 |
the ladyes come out | 3 |
in the same wyse | 3 |
in the romance of | 3 |
the petty customs in | 3 |
that it is a | 3 |
may it be sayd | 3 |
was granted the right | 3 |
a song and many | 3 |
that is the cause | 3 |
into their own hands | 3 |
and if so be | 3 |
she is the best | 3 |
be called defended he | 3 |
is the sole authority | 3 |
every thing that is | 3 |
the isle of ladies | 3 |
god amende hem for | 3 |
the office of constable | 3 |
that it was the | 3 |
the records of the | 3 |
that there is none | 3 |
to beholde it was | 3 |
that of any other | 3 |
to love and serve | 3 |
think to be in | 3 |
and that in the | 3 |
be held to have | 3 |
the fashion of his | 3 |
of chivalry in the | 3 |
which he had already | 3 |
built of stone and | 3 |
the relations between the | 3 |
pitcher of wine daily | 3 |
and that he was | 3 |
motions of the planets | 3 |
of good women he | 3 |
i never think to | 3 |
all the heavenly bodies | 3 |
it will be noted | 3 |
when he was in | 3 |
of the most remarkable | 3 |
he must have been | 3 |
prologue to the astrolabe | 3 |
with cloth of gold | 3 |
from a photograph by | 3 |
the sake of the | 3 |
of the present day | 3 |
by on and on | 3 |
balade in praise of | 3 |
of the upper classes | 3 |
to have taken place | 3 |
rising and setting of | 3 |
i will tell thee | 3 |
he and his wife | 3 |
later in the same | 3 |
and maketh hem to | 3 |
it is useless to | 3 |
that is to sayne | 3 |
in the latter part | 3 |
position in the heavens | 3 |
while at the same | 3 |
to those of the | 3 |
i dressed me in | 3 |
of the esquiers of | 3 |
year he was sent | 3 |
it is in the | 3 |
it is hardly possible | 3 |
of the privy seal | 3 |
the earlier part of | 3 |
john of gaunt to | 3 |
be under your governaunce | 3 |
the planet is on | 3 |
of the daughter of | 3 |
iii and richard ii | 3 |
offices parvantz furrures a | 3 |
edward iii john de | 3 |
from one of the | 3 |
right as it is | 3 |
was sent on secret | 3 |
a treaty of peace | 3 |
an annuity of twenty | 3 |
in so far as | 3 |
of chaucer and of | 3 |
a reference to the | 3 |
all that he had | 3 |
it is due to | 3 |
with hir hornes pale | 3 |
goode she is the | 3 |
by chaucer in the | 3 |
the head of the | 3 |
it to be the | 3 |
between the said hall | 3 |
he it not have | 3 |
it was thought that | 3 |
written in alliterative verse | 3 |
the collectors of the | 3 |
without the aid of | 3 |
the accounts of the | 3 |
the wyf of bathes | 3 |
to the plane of | 3 |
by him in the | 3 |
ii he was paid | 3 |
in which the king | 3 |
to an observer on | 3 |
the orbits of the | 3 |
spheres of the planets | 3 |
i pray to god | 3 |
in which the author | 3 |
is cleped the cercle | 3 |
list of justices of | 3 |
the house of the | 3 |
altitude of the sun | 3 |
formerly the property of | 3 |
in the same volume | 3 |
th degree of taurus | 3 |
which he was to | 3 |
which he seems to | 3 |
in the possession of | 3 |
one of the chief | 3 |
it is a pity | 3 |
the said hall and | 3 |
of the first book | 3 |
of the lands of | 3 |
the office by deputy | 3 |
of the canterbury pilgrims | 3 |
one of the executors | 3 |
be that it shal | 3 |
as in that of | 3 |
of the nine worthies | 3 |
the conduct of the | 3 |
he was granted an | 3 |
french roman de la | 3 |
anelida and the false | 3 |
it seems to me | 3 |
comptroller of the customs | 3 |
sun and moon were | 3 |
it is not the | 3 |
is holde for to | 3 |
and setting of the | 3 |
me in myn aray | 3 |
an examination of the | 3 |
was appointed clerk of | 3 |
paid forty pounds for | 3 |
he was born in | 3 |
by the middle of | 3 |
the first place it | 3 |
the first is the | 3 |
at the battle of | 3 |
the lawe of kynde | 3 |
that it is so | 3 |
is obvious that the | 3 |
as a great circle | 3 |
of the story of | 3 |
in so many other | 3 |
by christine de pisan | 3 |
it will be remembered | 3 |
in the issue roll | 3 |
it is the best | 3 |
the daughter of the | 3 |
there is but one | 3 |
for peace with france | 3 |
in mind that the | 3 |
see the last note | 3 |
was paid forty pounds | 3 |
may be that it | 3 |
he is the first | 3 |
in all the world | 3 |
to the influence of | 3 |
my rememb e raunce | 3 |
there is no evidence | 3 |
never think to be | 3 |
was a knight of | 3 |
the doctrine of necessity | 3 |
ten commandments of love | 3 |
i shal you tel | 3 |
of keeper of the | 3 |
the parson in the | 3 |
chaucer and john of | 3 |
if the planet is | 3 |
one of the knights | 3 |
we find in the | 3 |
a partisan of the | 3 |
here and there a | 3 |
from the legend of | 3 |
of astronomical lore in | 3 |
of the use of | 3 |
nature of the case | 3 |
for most of the | 3 |
to john de beverle | 3 |
by the feith i | 3 |
i wot wel thou | 3 |
which can hardly be | 3 |
the ravages of the | 3 |
the earth at e | 3 |
arms and archers in | 3 |
of the privy council | 3 |
it must have been | 3 |
the angle of elevation | 3 |
the first syllable of | 3 |
in your temporel tyme | 3 |
at an angle of | 3 |
at the hands of | 3 |
money from the exchequer | 3 |
al goode she is | 3 |
customs in the port | 3 |
the basis of his | 3 |
seems likely that the | 3 |
so far as it | 3 |
as controller of the | 3 |
sent on secret business | 3 |
and warden of the | 3 |
knight of the garter | 3 |
the last year of | 3 |
of a court of | 3 |
in the everlasting present | 3 |
a comparison of the | 3 |
into the service of | 3 |
to treat with the | 3 |
reign of edward iii | 3 |
all the rest of | 3 |
sir thomas de percy | 3 |
for as moche as | 3 |
circles of the celestial | 3 |
the educated men of | 3 |
for wele or wo | 3 |
this man thou demest | 3 |
and what is better | 3 |
granted for life the | 3 |
so be that i | 3 |
is known to have | 3 |
throughout the middle ages | 3 |
after the school of | 3 |
his treatise on the | 3 |
we know that he | 3 |
the date at which | 3 |
the note to l | 3 |
how they come togider | 3 |
further in the introduction | 3 |
the social and political | 3 |
iii he is called | 3 |
and many a lecherous | 3 |
lady of the leef | 3 |
center of the universe | 3 |
the earl of warwick | 3 |
and the legend of | 3 |
from the book of | 3 |
the supposition that chaucer | 3 |
the effect of the | 3 |
by the author of | 3 |
the terms of the | 3 |
which we may call | 3 |
the careers of the | 3 |
selfe may he it | 3 |
as well as by | 3 |
of chaucer to his | 3 |
is the cold that | 3 |
beholde it was a | 3 |
end of the th | 3 |
planet is on the | 3 |
the geocentric system of | 3 |
in the following passage | 3 |
granted an annuity of | 3 |
in the light of | 3 |
it may be that | 3 |
the first lines of | 3 |
we come to a | 3 |
in a passage of | 3 |
the passion of love | 3 |
the times in which | 3 |
the lamentation of mary | 3 |
knights of the garter | 3 |
the lord of the | 3 |
the name of his | 3 |
is a pity that | 3 |
the whole tone of | 3 |
from the romance of | 3 |
the in ne rest | 3 |
like that of the | 3 |
is referred to as | 3 |
thanked her in our | 3 |
the nature of a | 3 |
song and many a | 3 |
word of four syllables | 3 |
is more or less | 3 |
in the trinity ms | 3 |
the king granted him | 3 |
is not likely that | 3 |
even in the th | 3 |
the precession of the | 3 |
not only of the | 3 |
see the note on | 3 |
not make his rule | 3 |
the griffin and the | 3 |
social life of the | 3 |
due to the fact | 3 |
motion of the sun | 3 |
the form of a | 3 |
that it was not | 3 |
blisse of my service | 3 |
of simon de burley | 3 |
history of the english | 3 |
he was paid ten | 3 |
to be a lover | 3 |
god may well amend | 3 |
in the other direction | 3 |
i dar wel say | 3 |
the quene of love | 3 |
the story of the | 3 |
and yet ben they | 3 |
of the chapters in | 3 |
parvantz furrures a chaperon | 3 |
but when he found | 3 |
men at arms and | 3 |
the th century a | 3 |
of the seal for | 3 |
hour of the day | 3 |
a great circle of | 3 |
a study of the | 3 |
of the parson in | 3 |
no more of this | 3 |
and as i stood | 3 |
held the office of | 3 |
the lew e de | 3 |
of gascon wine yearly | 3 |
author of the court | 3 |
english men of letters | 3 |
john of gaunt and | 3 |
character of the parson | 3 |
his house of fame | 3 |
the line runs badly | 3 |
not far from the | 3 |
first lines of the | 3 |
not too much to | 3 |
had the grant of | 3 |
nothing could be more | 3 |
clerk of the works | 3 |
to whom the king | 3 |
troilus and cressid and | 3 |
was granted for life | 3 |
in favour with the | 3 |
as the type of | 3 |
of stone and timber | 3 |
the grace of god | 3 |
edition of that poem | 3 |
chaucer to his purse | 3 |
that may nat be | 3 |
dumb as any stone | 3 |
point in the heavens | 3 |
examination of the rimes | 3 |
with whom chaucer was | 3 |
and forth they yede | 3 |
of the celestial motions | 3 |
and must have been | 3 |
do he never so | 3 |
was a greet plesaunce | 3 |
to my lord of | 3 |
suggested by the mention | 3 |
mone with hir hornes | 3 |
is to be a | 3 |
sittest at another book | 3 |
the time when he | 3 |
in one of these | 3 |
through the center of | 3 |
to wilne that he | 3 |
does not appear in | 3 |
whatever may have been | 3 |
the university of oxford | 3 |
of justices of the | 3 |
probably an error for | 3 |
by sir richard ros | 3 |
the earl of arundel | 3 |
passing through the poles | 3 |
no way to the | 3 |
in the household lists | 3 |
seems to have lived | 3 |
wife of bath is | 3 |
the scene of the | 3 |
he must have had | 3 |
of the esquires of | 3 |
more natural than that | 3 |
the same time he | 3 |
have been among the | 3 |
to the time of | 3 |
the use of a | 3 |
of al goode she | 3 |
in every wightes ere | 3 |
the character of a | 3 |
it was natural that | 3 |
the nine ladies worthy | 3 |
on that other syde | 3 |
to the everlasting presence | 3 |
in the law courts | 3 |
but tel me this | 3 |
i wot not how | 3 |
round tower of windsor | 3 |
he was granted custody | 3 |
the grant of the | 3 |
john de beverle was | 3 |
as in the case | 3 |
the cause of this | 3 |
the archbishop of canterbury | 3 |
an annuity of ten | 3 |
to be in the | 3 |
in the british museum | 3 |
that of the other | 3 |
of what he has | 3 |
of the prince of | 3 |
the social life of | 3 |
own words in the | 3 |
forty pounds for a | 3 |
the thought of the | 3 |
the celestial sphere in | 3 |
for a short time | 3 |
the decay of chivalry | 3 |
there are one or | 3 |
to don hir houres | 3 |
edition of the temple | 3 |
my book be leude | 3 |
the poets of the | 3 |
lamentation of mary magdalen | 3 |
in edward iii the | 3 |
with the description of | 3 |
thilke thinges that ben | 3 |
know of no ms | 3 |
the list of esquires | 3 |
and the earl of | 3 |
is absolutely necessary to | 3 |
as the author of | 3 |
of the town of | 3 |
the whole the most | 3 |
make his rule so | 3 |
he was paid forty | 3 |
in our most humble | 3 |
what betokeneth that ye | 3 |
circles on the celestial | 3 |
of the blessed virgin | 3 |
his clerkship of the | 3 |
he is said to | 3 |
of the shire for | 3 |
to the king in | 3 |
hoolly to be under | 3 |
is the hye way | 3 |
to a certain extent | 3 |
why make ye you | 3 |
note that the author | 3 |
the story is in | 3 |
as there is no | 3 |
as lowe as lucifer | 3 |
one another in the | 3 |
that it shal nat | 3 |
hymn to the virgin | 3 |
of the hundred of | 3 |
north or south of | 3 |
a quarter of a | 3 |
it may be asked | 3 |
in the next year | 3 |
it is said that | 3 |
educated men of his | 3 |
to the middle of | 3 |
the th century than | 3 |
esquiers de greindre estat | 3 |
to the virgin mary | 3 |
may well be that | 3 |
every man is holde | 3 |
is to be found | 3 |
that chaucer should have | 3 |
the opening of his | 3 |
the love of books | 3 |
on with myn aray | 3 |
part of her dower | 3 |
the king and queen | 3 |
there was once a | 3 |
i can find no | 3 |
appointed one of the | 3 |
because of her greater | 3 |
knights of the shire | 3 |
a thing that is | 3 |
more than a thousand | 3 |
of god and the | 3 |
the whole of this | 3 |
towards the close of | 3 |
as in so many | 3 |
of the god of | 3 |
to the blessed virgin | 3 |
similar to those of | 3 |
expanse of the heavens | 3 |
circle passing through the | 3 |
of which he was | 3 |
from this time forward | 3 |
to that of the | 3 |
the authorship of the | 3 |
and all such faytours | 3 |
from day to day | 3 |
the point of the | 3 |
way to the knotte | 3 |
that he could not | 3 |
are written in a | 3 |
of his century in | 3 |
in his own time | 3 |
his translation of boethius | 3 |
this is a very | 3 |
in the tower of | 3 |
and may have been | 3 |
the accuracy of the | 3 |
of one of his | 3 |
in the public records | 3 |
of the church of | 3 |
he was granted for | 3 |
a couple of generations | 3 |
different from that of | 3 |
maysters be called defended | 3 |
to assure us that | 3 |
in that year and | 3 |
not to be found | 3 |
he was appointed one | 3 |
seems to be to | 3 |
that chaucer was a | 3 |
on the celestial equator | 3 |
daughter and coheir of | 3 |
and herafter foloweth the | 3 |
from the point of | 3 |
that i may not | 3 |
sayings printed by caxton | 3 |
what he has seen | 3 |
to show that the | 3 |
ther may no man | 3 |
of all the lands | 3 |
pointed out that the | 3 |
of the death of | 3 |
the same time the | 3 |
to be to the | 3 |
of the poem is | 3 |
the works of chaucer | 3 |
thou sittest at another | 3 |
in the same order | 3 |
for the loss of | 3 |
the french roman de | 3 |
was at this time | 3 |
the opening lines of | 3 |
in his prison lean | 3 |
of the prologue to | 3 |
and that it was | 3 |
custody of all the | 3 |
the feast of st | 3 |
time when he was | 3 |
in one of his | 3 |
for the more part | 3 |
but it is a | 3 |
in the university of | 3 |
or south of the | 3 |
and the note to | 3 |
of john de hastyngs | 3 |
point of the horizon | 3 |
is derived from the | 3 |
that he had been | 3 |
from the days when | 3 |
angle of elevation of | 3 |
vision concerning piers plowman | 3 |
a noble thing and | 3 |
given in the new | 3 |
marry one of the | 3 |
in which he was | 3 |
to the king for | 3 |
are not to be | 3 |
on the point of | 3 |
by the authoress of | 3 |
lew e de cukkow | 3 |
which he was a | 3 |
at the moment of | 3 |
and on the other | 3 |
fact that chaucer was | 3 |
the day of the | 3 |
translation of this poem | 3 |
addressed to a lady | 3 |
is recorded to have | 3 |
that in the year | 3 |
of the customs in | 3 |
that he may have | 3 |
it is not likely | 3 |
what may be called | 3 |
he tells us how | 3 |
it may well be | 3 |
the nations of europe | 3 |
of the executors of | 3 |
over the minds of | 3 |
to be under your | 3 |
the custody of all | 3 |
from the very first | 3 |
a pitcher of wine | 3 |
in the way of | 3 |
it is not my | 3 |
and he that hath | 3 |
very early example of | 3 |
hye way to this | 3 |
fresh as is the | 3 |
the power of the | 3 |
by means of the | 3 |
setting of the sun | 3 |
in proper ne in | 3 |
it belongs to the | 3 |
that hath so wyde | 3 |
me on with myn | 3 |
right of his wife | 3 |
in a similar way | 3 |
the laws of london | 3 |
of the zodiacal signs | 3 |
so wyde for to | 3 |
the form of the | 3 |
and richard ii he | 3 |
of the citizens of | 3 |
seems to be no | 3 |
to have been written | 3 |
abjuration of the realm | 3 |
motion of the moon | 3 |
of it in the | 3 |
the sergeantz des offices | 3 |
in the parish of | 3 |
the new english dictionary | 3 |
the keeper of the | 3 |
there seems every reason | 3 |
into his own hands | 3 |
to account for the | 3 |
lands and tenements formerly | 3 |
with a reference to | 3 |
of the assembly of | 3 |
marks in addition to | 3 |
fer as i can | 3 |
the men of the | 3 |
in no maner wyse | 3 |
of the order of | 3 |
an observer on the | 3 |
use of the word | 3 |
of the family of | 3 |
the palace of westminster | 3 |
so also in l | 3 |
john of gaunt as | 3 |
granted the manor of | 3 |
duke of gloucester was | 3 |
of a pitcher of | 3 |
edward iii and richard | 3 |
the second and third | 3 |
there is every reason | 3 |
in those days of | 3 |
by the mention of | 3 |
the time of his | 3 |
and many mo other | 3 |
the clerk of oxford | 3 |
of parliament for kent | 3 |
as fresh as is | 3 |
have nothing to do | 3 |
that they were not | 3 |
her in our most | 3 |
there is nothing to | 3 |
the reign of edward | 3 |
the reference to the | 3 |
sent to king richard | 3 |
it shal nat be | 3 |
the circumstances of the | 3 |
the bente mone with | 3 |
was probably suggested by | 3 |
keeper of the smaller | 3 |
sir edward de berkeley | 3 |
in the lists of | 3 |
our most humble wyse | 3 |
the representatives of the | 3 |
he may well have | 3 |
and at the same | 3 |
that is to sayn | 3 |
not occur in the | 3 |
annuity of twenty pounds | 3 |
we have already seen | 3 |
that it was at | 3 |
his tomb in westminster | 3 |
than all the rest | 3 |
of william de beauchamp | 3 |
the countess of ulster | 3 |
the former of these | 3 |
with a large capital | 3 |
john de beverle and | 3 |
the plan of the | 3 |
in more or less | 3 |
has long ago been | 3 |
the former half of | 3 |
and al this is | 3 |
of a star is | 3 |
and we find him | 3 |
in the way in | 3 |
the parish of st | 3 |
than wol they say | 3 |
wyde for to turne | 3 |
to the loss of | 3 |
to the lordes and | 3 |
a great part of | 3 |
hue and cry after | 3 |
was out of favour | 3 |
may have been in | 3 |
we do not know | 3 |
in which it is | 3 |
before the end of | 3 |
be in his prison | 3 |
that is no nay | 3 |
precession of the equinoxes | 3 |
and cry after a | 3 |
the side of the | 3 |
good counsel of chaucer | 3 |
the rising and setting | 3 |
romans and of bohemia | 3 |
many of the esquires | 3 |
son of edward iii | 3 |
of the french original | 3 |
book of the duchesse | 3 |
a long series of | 3 |
which were neuer in | 3 |
offices in the customs | 3 |
middle of the fourteenth | 3 |
for the purpose of | 3 |
it is said of | 3 |
a very early example | 3 |
the first part of | 3 |
whom the king has | 3 |
by far the greater | 3 |
or els holy church | 3 |
in conjunction with the | 3 |
in the form of | 3 |
of one of these | 3 |
knight of the shire | 3 |
is every reason to | 3 |
he was with the | 3 |
if it be the | 3 |
for to tel you | 3 |
on the north side | 3 |
as the basis of | 3 |
lowe as lucifer such | 3 |
see notes to ll | 3 |
and so it is | 3 |
in the same tale | 3 |
one of the royal | 3 |
daily motion of the | 3 |
the last decennium of | 3 |
one of the collectors | 3 |
taken as the basis | 3 |
than in any other | 3 |
as an excuse for | 3 |
that is to seyn | 3 |
from the nature of | 3 |
he was allowed to | 3 |
away from the sun | 3 |
a member of parliament | 3 |
the first line of | 3 |
the question as to | 3 |
it may have been | 3 |
by the end of | 3 |
john of gaunt is | 3 |
the colour of constancy | 3 |
to tel you playn | 3 |
as i have already | 3 |
the sphere of the | 3 |
there is more to | 3 |
is a very interesting | 3 |
god beforn wot me | 3 |
appointed clerk of the | 3 |
one of his own | 3 |
above al other thinges | 3 |
and it may be | 3 |
if i be not | 3 |
very much the same | 3 |
by this time the | 3 |
part of the king | 3 |
is the best livinge | 3 |
part of the treatise | 3 |
note to that line | 3 |
complaint of chaucer to | 3 |
go aboute and begge | 3 |
al were he mytre | 3 |
bente mone with hir | 3 |
the date of this | 3 |
the rays of the | 3 |
of the company of | 3 |
explained in the notes | 3 |
one or the other | 3 |
the romans and of | 3 |
see further in the | 3 |
for of al goode | 3 |
the population of england | 3 |
for them that be | 3 |
since i from love | 3 |
in suche a place | 3 |
it is said to | 3 |
that the list of | 3 |
rays of the sun | 3 |
the poem in the | 3 |
the ptolemaic system of | 3 |
the ten commandments of | 3 |
that he was in | 3 |
men of his century | 3 |
with the king of | 3 |
he was on a | 3 |
the old text has | 3 |
shal you tel the | 3 |
well that it is | 3 |
bodies with regard to | 2 |
two hundred years ago | 2 |
of the past tense | 2 |
grant for life of | 2 |
the middle of april | 2 |
earth around the sun | 2 |
he has lost his | 2 |
does not wish to | 2 |
been to longe henne | 2 |
the burden of the | 2 |
the collectors of customs | 2 |
of the port of | 2 |
i hope to have | 2 |
used at the end | 2 |
summoner and the pardoner | 2 |
in that of his | 2 |
on the art of | 2 |
of most of his | 2 |
well as in that | 2 |
relations with john of | 2 |
of christ and his | 2 |
be movable in tyme | 2 |
of the word in | 2 |
thou desyre the rumour | 2 |
the same class as | 2 |
nothing now may serve | 2 |
and the absence of | 2 |
the followers of the | 2 |
took part in the | 2 |
besides being hated in | 2 |
in my most humble | 2 |
apt to overlook in | 2 |
time of their birth | 2 |
custodian of the castle | 2 |
and the manor of | 2 |
to the date of | 2 |
his gyte full gay | 2 |
the school of oxenford | 2 |
but if thou wolt | 2 |
many men have had | 2 |
from the second degree | 2 |
in the notes to | 2 |
conjunction with the sun | 2 |
fortune hath yeven us | 2 |
of constable of windsor | 2 |
conventions of his time | 2 |
ix town and country | 2 |
the complaint of pity | 2 |
in the poetry of | 2 |
the traditions of their | 2 |
as it is now | 2 |
in which case it | 2 |
of the chaucer society | 2 |
he hit he not | 2 |
quoted in the note | 2 |
thy good willes to | 2 |
as the best of | 2 |
to treat with flanders | 2 |
th and th centuries | 2 |
than the lewde cukkow | 2 |
of him whiche is | 2 |
takes the form of | 2 |
and it would be | 2 |
noon hyer was he | 2 |
is a maner of | 2 |
of a line in | 2 |
that hews above his | 2 |
to the black prince | 2 |
or she was born | 2 |
from the character of | 2 |
way to this knot | 2 |
of sir thomas mandeville | 2 |
considerable wealth and position | 2 |
it has sometimes been | 2 |
what thing to women | 2 |
this points to a | 2 |
for the county of | 2 |
refers to the lady | 2 |
never have knowlege what | 2 |
was steward of the | 2 |
shoving themselves by a | 2 |
scarcely have failed to | 2 |
the day of my | 2 |
first he followed it | 2 |
holden the upperest degree | 2 |
to be accepted as | 2 |
and handsomest of all | 2 |
for the first leudnesse | 2 |
in which chaucer is | 2 |
one of the earliest | 2 |
as if he had | 2 |
which might more reasonably | 2 |
here the nightingale rather | 2 |
and now it is | 2 |
post of royal squire | 2 |
it is of some | 2 |
path of the zodiac | 2 |
for well i wot | 2 |
a hole in the | 2 |
in the parliament of | 2 |
the nearest approach to | 2 |
his attitude toward the | 2 |
distance of a star | 2 |
in the seventh stanza | 2 |
printed for the first | 2 |
it the ale of | 2 |
season of the year | 2 |
take up the matter | 2 |
the earl of oxford | 2 |
the right reading of | 2 |
turned out to be | 2 |
the term esquier in | 2 |
down from the spikes | 2 |
everich on her hede | 2 |
that he had never | 2 |
allowed to appoint a | 2 |
grace and blisse of | 2 |
in this same year | 2 |
as i have found | 2 |
of removing the rocks | 2 |
more reasonably be called | 2 |
yet wolde i here | 2 |
with his bemes shene | 2 |
cause of this knot | 2 |
meridional circle between the | 2 |
i here give the | 2 |
of dover castle and | 2 |
member of the gloucester | 2 |
the face of a | 2 |
the purpose of showing | 2 |
for the passage of | 2 |
to thomas de percy | 2 |
may be compared with | 2 |
a large house built | 2 |
of his introduction to | 2 |
of london in and | 2 |
no wode lay use | 2 |
for many of the | 2 |
to him a grant | 2 |
the thin end of | 2 |
hand of the sixteenth | 2 |
epithets for the sun | 2 |
to the second book | 2 |
is four degrees up | 2 |
of war in the | 2 |
mead all full of | 2 |
alexandra de la mote | 2 |
other end of the | 2 |
his father had been | 2 |
gan i me present | 2 |
chips fall in his | 2 |
world to loke on | 2 |
of the law of | 2 |
sans ose ieo dyre | 2 |
the celestial sphere it | 2 |
is copied from ch | 2 |
the order of knighthood | 2 |
never out of my | 2 |
the present poem is | 2 |
the birds of prey | 2 |
in imitation of boethius | 2 |
and it has thence | 2 |
in his political poems | 2 |
and whan that she | 2 |
confirmed to him a | 2 |
as in the old | 2 |
north point on the | 2 |
an error for weede | 2 |
of the sixteenth century | 2 |
that the latter part | 2 |
what is thy name | 2 |
sciences touching numbers and | 2 |
the chapters in book | 2 |
man is holde for | 2 |
for his wages in | 2 |
dar i not come | 2 |
assign a date to | 2 |
the positions of the | 2 |
by queynt knitting coloures | 2 |
by the terms of | 2 |
the sake of his | 2 |
the custody of sherwood | 2 |
as we know from | 2 |
and i believe that | 2 |
for the meridian of | 2 |
the famous roman de | 2 |
for to discryve and | 2 |
amended be the nexte | 2 |
a description of a | 2 |
to assign a date | 2 |
the doctor of physic | 2 |
mention of it in | 2 |
and my lady free | 2 |
their feet and under | 2 |
wil may no man | 2 |
sets in the west | 2 |
nothing so leef as | 2 |
end of the line | 2 |
to slee the trewe | 2 |
from the middle of | 2 |
see little good in | 2 |
our knowledge of the | 2 |
at one with the | 2 |
noon so good servyse | 2 |
manor and park of | 2 |
to some subjects explained | 2 |
to think that the | 2 |
for though a man | 2 |
he was a man | 2 |
he was paid l | 2 |
chamber with a chimney | 2 |
and by no means | 2 |
from the king downwards | 2 |
the first four stanzas | 2 |
as an interpreter of | 2 |
xiv king and queen | 2 |
book of consolation and | 2 |
strike the northern hemisphere | 2 |
it refers to the | 2 |
far as i have | 2 |
was the first to | 2 |
off la rochelle in | 2 |
to us from the | 2 |
of the same seed | 2 |
the tropic of capricorn | 2 |
the day of his | 2 |
heled and in every | 2 |
had leave to lie | 2 |
book of the leo | 2 |
he was granted a | 2 |
merry tale in prose | 2 |
was chamberlain of the | 2 |
han soiled that i | 2 |
ploughman from the louterell | 2 |
nor brown it was | 2 |
the earth as a | 2 |
use of the astrolabe | 2 |
annuity of twenty marks | 2 |
of the inhabitants of | 2 |
the age of chivalry | 2 |
the latter had been | 2 |
the sun reaches this | 2 |
wight doth he dalliance | 2 |
al this clepe i | 2 |
that it is greet | 2 |
in the tale of | 2 |
de bukton is mentioned | 2 |
part of this tale | 2 |
four at the end | 2 |
was recognized as a | 2 |
parcel of the erthe | 2 |
there was a company | 2 |
the men who were | 2 |
was called in the | 2 |
begins with the words | 2 |
the sawes of the | 2 |
out of thy moders | 2 |
a people accustomed to | 2 |
of the fixed stars | 2 |
is much the same | 2 |
with her three speces | 2 |
upon the chaunging of | 2 |
not worth a straw | 2 |
in my medieval studies | 2 |
course of his life | 2 |
and put him in | 2 |
butt of wine from | 2 |
hue and cry was | 2 |
is to be comming | 2 |
the waste in the | 2 |
seen some time a | 2 |
chapters in book i | 2 |
foul mote him befall | 2 |
sir david lyndsay was | 2 |
only one side of | 2 |
this god may well | 2 |
little heaviness is right | 2 |
to have made a | 2 |
among the greeks and | 2 |
declination of the sun | 2 |
may no man it | 2 |
of all lands and | 2 |
his attitude toward astrology | 2 |
dover and warden of | 2 |
is nat told for | 2 |
if any of them | 2 |
to be moving around | 2 |
who in was an | 2 |
that he were of | 2 |
when he found that | 2 |
dolia of gascon wine | 2 |
seeking to compass the | 2 |
to borrow money from | 2 |
a grant of two | 2 |
this piece there are | 2 |
of the higher classes | 2 |
he would hardly have | 2 |
had special power over | 2 |
helden lefe or loth | 2 |
oon of hem wroot | 2 |
had i non herd | 2 |
ye rede hem al | 2 |
was not removed from | 2 |
them give i faith | 2 |
has been made of | 2 |
with sir john burley | 2 |
this worlde is noon | 2 |
no man me reproche | 2 |
it could not possibly | 2 |
do what truth biddeth | 2 |
by the internet archive | 2 |
then said the lady | 2 |
in the second part | 2 |
of thy sothfast frendes | 2 |
must of course be | 2 |
these thinges and many | 2 |
in the words which | 2 |
chapter xi canterbury tales | 2 |
the lower part of | 2 |
it was enacted that | 2 |
of himself and his | 2 |
and quackery connected with | 2 |
at the sygne of | 2 |
evidently suggested by the | 2 |
war in the middle | 2 |
with him as in | 2 |
because he stays continually | 2 |
contains the story of | 2 |
it was to be | 2 |
a society in which | 2 |
on the other side | 2 |
thirteenth and fourteenth centuries | 2 |
and not to be | 2 |
is of later date | 2 |
venus is at v | 2 |
of venus as presiding | 2 |
nat demen after the | 2 |
and it is quite | 2 |
couple of generations earlier | 2 |
through me men go | 2 |
walter whithors married mabel | 2 |
passing through the star | 2 |
we must remember that | 2 |
the th and early | 2 |
to do as you | 2 |
tells us plainly that | 2 |
in the divine comedy | 2 |
thou not naked out | 2 |
was the reverse of | 2 |
the count of hainault | 2 |
of al the worldes | 2 |
were granted at his | 2 |
had occasion to note | 2 |
it is not necessary | 2 |
as great as millstones | 2 |
was evidently suggested by | 2 |
reached me after my | 2 |
to make hem of | 2 |
the feith i shall | 2 |
eye had seen together | 2 |
religion among the greeks | 2 |
who was supposed to | 2 |
suche grace and non | 2 |
none of the other | 2 |
could scarcely have been | 2 |
the origin of which | 2 |
of the earlier part | 2 |
to be one of | 2 |
absence or negative of | 2 |
and this shal be | 2 |
were good to here | 2 |
gap in the ms | 2 |
the noble and worthy | 2 |
i cast me to | 2 |
must think of him | 2 |
the book of cupid | 2 |
stop at the end | 2 |
by virtue of his | 2 |
povere in gost god | 2 |
by no way may | 2 |
hand to draw him | 2 |
right sone upon the | 2 |
seems to me that | 2 |
in the county histories | 2 |
on the verge of | 2 |
general belief in the | 2 |
as will be seen | 2 |
him one of the | 2 |
birds singing their matins | 2 |
of the greater custom | 2 |
custody of the forest | 2 |
to the foot of | 2 |
in he was one | 2 |
is hid under cloude | 2 |
there is no more | 2 |
the st degree of | 2 |
in the choice of | 2 |
about the earth are | 2 |
the fact that our | 2 |
or an arrow out | 2 |
conception of the poem | 2 |
seal of uppingham school | 2 |
i count him not | 2 |
before its recent restoration | 2 |
printed on the same | 2 |
i drede not your | 2 |
sailor was a potential | 2 |
way with the court | 2 |
among his genuine works | 2 |
was presented by the | 2 |
of a loveres lyfe | 2 |
richard ii richard forester | 2 |
the coast of brittany | 2 |
on a large scale | 2 |
stood the heven whan | 2 |
or at least of | 2 |
to imply that the | 2 |
was a partisan of | 2 |
to the tastes of | 2 |
is required for the | 2 |
to thy house anon | 2 |
his relation to john | 2 |
out of the erthe | 2 |
hem for his grace | 2 |
by stowe from ms | 2 |
over and above his | 2 |
is worthy to be | 2 |
of the th and | 2 |
a member of john | 2 |
part of the country | 2 |
is that of a | 2 |
deaths of the duke | 2 |
the chips fall in | 2 |
in and edward iii | 2 |
of the family as | 2 |
in the poor parson | 2 |
to the comptrollership of | 2 |
but most of the | 2 |
to pass from aries | 2 |
the very time when | 2 |
body of the instrument | 2 |
from one of his | 2 |
him the value of | 2 |
and how that he | 2 |
ground i see thee | 2 |
and in many other | 2 |
is ynough that my | 2 |
never wont to be | 2 |
have been one of | 2 |
it is best to | 2 |
the death of pity | 2 |
treat with the duke | 2 |
written in the stars | 2 |
that chaucer fully shared | 2 |
catche catell as covytous | 2 |
ful humb el ly | 2 |
of the primum mobile | 2 |
to which it refers | 2 |
the proper sense of | 2 |
of the heir of | 2 |
real nature of the | 2 |
and whom he hit | 2 |
by side with their | 2 |
the rich and powerful | 2 |
after two introductory stanzas | 2 |
his tomb in york | 2 |
the last of the | 2 |
of a century later | 2 |
he represents himself as | 2 |
he shall no gospel | 2 |
saw her dance so | 2 |
that it might be | 2 |
a moi que je | 2 |
we thanked her in | 2 |
cannot be far wrong | 2 |
went on a diplomatic | 2 |
distance north or south | 2 |
first and second days | 2 |
that the heved of | 2 |
by wayes of riches | 2 |
ceasing to be a | 2 |
in most of his | 2 |
concentric to the star | 2 |
or thrice in the | 2 |
is never mentioned in | 2 |
fyrelesse fyre set on | 2 |
thus to and fro | 2 |
who was a great | 2 |
and that he would | 2 |
the man of lawe | 2 |
of troilus and cressid | 2 |
of the third heaven | 2 |
complains that he has | 2 |
other example of this | 2 |
is the mother of | 2 |
the worst abuses in | 2 |
eleven stanzas of the | 2 |
matter would be to | 2 |
this is the short | 2 |
kings and constituted authorities | 2 |
love wil not be | 2 |
angular distance from the | 2 |
against the law of | 2 |
and not ane word | 2 |
wicked tonge wol alway | 2 |
which case it would | 2 |
on the first syllable | 2 |
so far as to | 2 |
in this case the | 2 |
are so numerous that | 2 |
that he had taken | 2 |
with vaults for the | 2 |
in ful pitous wyse | 2 |
la bele dame sanz | 2 |
to the will of | 2 |
to the head of | 2 |
chaucer and his poetry | 2 |
faith and full credence | 2 |
the king of hevene | 2 |
some of hem ben | 2 |
relation to john of | 2 |
he did not actually | 2 |
a man of business | 2 |
a dowry of a | 2 |
if so were that | 2 |
priere de notre dame | 2 |
the second part of | 2 |
grant of a manor | 2 |
and every lady had | 2 |
stays continually in the | 2 |
of drawing up a | 2 |
of two hundred pounds | 2 |
they begonne of may | 2 |
hath been so long | 2 |
version of the bible | 2 |
lacked and praysed of | 2 |
by wit and humour | 2 |
case of the sun | 2 |
of which he has | 2 |
of taurus into cancer | 2 |
much of this was | 2 |
the planets are not | 2 |
pounds for his wages | 2 |
of your feith the | 2 |
significacion of tyme passed | 2 |
of twenty pounds by | 2 |
in the former poem | 2 |
all the lands and | 2 |
yet had i non | 2 |
many of the most | 2 |
of right fyne enamayl | 2 |
piece in the present | 2 |
and in troilus and | 2 |
nothing as ye shulde | 2 |
it never so wel | 2 |
and the black prince | 2 |
of these lines to | 2 |
the vulgate version of | 2 |
that ye ben of | 2 |
he may have left | 2 |
chaucer was appointed clerk | 2 |
be brent in balefull | 2 |
fact that the moon | 2 |
for he that is | 2 |
yeven by the ayre | 2 |
hearken what i say | 2 |
seems to be some | 2 |
comptrollership of the petty | 2 |
a draught of moist | 2 |
more than any other | 2 |
the fruit of grace | 2 |
to the kinges most | 2 |
the second son of | 2 |
de meindre degree of | 2 |
and relative positions of | 2 |
in which we live | 2 |
for the crime of | 2 |
been accused of seeking | 2 |
a prologue to the | 2 |
the middle ages than | 2 |
it is pertinent to | 2 |
day to day is | 2 |
so many good dedes | 2 |
had at one time | 2 |
to go through the | 2 |
on the back of | 2 |
thou that my maner | 2 |
in and half out | 2 |
and many a song | 2 |
ne can ne may | 2 |
but there is not | 2 |
on either side of | 2 |
to the esquiers of | 2 |
the french original has | 2 |
he was granted free | 2 |
seen so blissful a | 2 |
and heir of william | 2 |
the end of that | 2 |
was a son of | 2 |
shape that fro the | 2 |
a tale in which | 2 |
and on the point | 2 |
the truth is that | 2 |
visus ad acta mea | 2 |
controllership of the greater | 2 |
but at least the | 2 |
all the men of | 2 |
lawe of kynde is | 2 |
the rumour therof be | 2 |
although thy abstinence is | 2 |
itself against the time | 2 |
at her next opposition | 2 |
and builde als brode | 2 |
foul oak at hatcham | 2 |
bindest the elements by | 2 |
the other end of | 2 |
as though they had | 2 |
it occurs in the | 2 |
he does so by | 2 |
the poem of piers | 2 |
is oon of the | 2 |
he did not understand | 2 |
may nat be goten | 2 |
bridge in the background | 2 |
broad as is a | 2 |
the influence of john | 2 |
wot wel thou art | 2 |
available by the internet | 2 |
sort the coller and | 2 |
and dyking fro town | 2 |
the murder of the | 2 |
and so to do | 2 |
people of his time | 2 |
forty pounds yearly to | 2 |
facts which we have | 2 |
of his vox clamantis | 2 |
but i have found | 2 |
been in great wealth | 2 |
was a world to | 2 |
it is an error | 2 |
we find that the | 2 |
the love of nature | 2 |
ascription of it to | 2 |
at the foot of | 2 |
we cannot too often | 2 |
it was one of | 2 |
minstrels gan to play | 2 |
of the town to | 2 |
it come to the | 2 |
making calculations from the | 2 |
to go with me | 2 |
shall be able to | 2 |
of the black prince | 2 |
it was the fashion | 2 |
written by the same | 2 |
wol singe oon of | 2 |
that a thing is | 2 |
issues of the exchequer | 2 |
as a bird flieth | 2 |
most enveloped in sin | 2 |
this were a puppet | 2 |
to the lady of | 2 |
chapter xx the poor | 2 |
was a man of | 2 |
is no such word | 2 |
as it occurs also | 2 |
the french poem entitled | 2 |
and on i put | 2 |
if he breke the | 2 |
fifth to the moon | 2 |
the other hand the | 2 |
of the council of | 2 |
study of observational astronomy | 2 |
he was on many | 2 |
the great pestilence of | 2 |
al thinges that ben | 2 |
to read i me | 2 |
ecliptic are great circles | 2 |
it might have be | 2 |
therof be heled and | 2 |
the tales told by | 2 |
return to troy within | 2 |
we notice that the | 2 |
in the philosophy of | 2 |
st degree of aries | 2 |
of the kind which | 2 |
to rede this lesson | 2 |
in the manciples tale | 2 |
the same time it | 2 |
of the envyous people | 2 |
the composition of this | 2 |
of that greater thing | 2 |
is in the northern | 2 |
and that al the | 2 |
of those who are | 2 |
would have been more | 2 |
every lady had a | 2 |
some tie bones to | 2 |
calendars constructed for the | 2 |
whele that bereth the | 2 |
by the time that | 2 |
sayde in this wyse | 2 |
over the same ground | 2 |
for at least a | 2 |
that the authoress was | 2 |
than gan i me | 2 |
his office in the | 2 |
first half of the | 2 |
the earliest known quotation | 2 |
sort exerciseth itself against | 2 |
of the threefold world | 2 |
to aid him in | 2 |
to the custom of | 2 |
other thinges that the | 2 |
it seems not too | 2 |
whylom was hit shape | 2 |
that the poet would | 2 |
is a correct form | 2 |
hated in the city | 2 |
sent with sir edward | 2 |
point of view the | 2 |
on the next page | 2 |
is more to be | 2 |
ought it to have | 2 |
the duchess of clarence | 2 |
in the th degree | 2 |
those of the planets | 2 |
the sense in which | 2 |
this is explained in | 2 |
the imposing of a | 2 |
so fresh of hew | 2 |
chaunging of the mone | 2 |
against the time of | 2 |
plan of the work | 2 |
that they are found | 2 |
that gentil is of | 2 |
herd the cukkow er | 2 |
in it all the | 2 |
of the second book | 2 |
to take his inn | 2 |
to the third book | 2 |
the company of the | 2 |
ye not seen some | 2 |
knew that he was | 2 |
fragment a of the | 2 |
was sent to flanders | 2 |
but it is the | 2 |
and in the first | 2 |
look thou do the | 2 |
no doubt as to | 2 |
mentioned in connection with | 2 |
that chaucer did not | 2 |
his worship and his | 2 |
of the lord lieutenant | 2 |
truth is that the | 2 |
suppose that he was | 2 |
when the duke of | 2 |
wil of instrument to | 2 |
the present edition is | 2 |
en france au m | 2 |
note on the line | 2 |
of this piece there | 2 |
out of the prees | 2 |
her tomb in westminster | 2 |
us in assuming that | 2 |
in strict proportion to | 2 |
and his relation to | 2 |
lands and tenements of | 2 |
fixed on the ground | 2 |
kings were obliged to | 2 |
there is no doubt | 2 |
in love with each | 2 |
like their type the | 2 |
thou passest nat the | 2 |
the author was a | 2 |
custody of all lands | 2 |
on the one side | 2 |
son of john de | 2 |
worthy lady my mistress | 2 |
my gere and myn | 2 |
to the king and | 2 |
a hand of the | 2 |
the heavenly bodies in | 2 |
one or other of | 2 |
and others for the | 2 |
in the parfit blisse | 2 |
at any given time | 2 |
lame and impotent conclusion | 2 |
so long as god | 2 |
from a study of | 2 |
many of the worst | 2 |
no request the whiche | 2 |
and another in the | 2 |
that i have been | 2 |
clear from the fact | 2 |
enough to many folk | 2 |
in he was apparently | 2 |
not to putte to | 2 |
account of his own | 2 |
gaunt was no longer | 2 |