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The Grammar of English Grammars

CHAPTER VII
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ENGLISH OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY.
44.

_Reign of Richard II, 1400 back to 1377 .-- Example written in 1391._ "Lytel Lowys my sonne, I perceve well by certaine evidences thyne abylyte to lerne scyences, touching nombres and proporcions, and also well consydre I thy besye prayer in especyal to lerne the tretyse of the _astrolabye_.
Than for as moche as a philosopher saithe, he wrapeth hym in his frende, that condiscendeth to the ryghtfull prayers of his frende: therefore I have given the a sufficient astrolabye for oure orizont, compowned after the latitude of Oxenforde: vpon the whiche by meditacion of this lytell tretise, I purpose to teche the a certame nombre of conclusions, pertainynge to this same instrument."-- GEOFFREY CHAUCER: _Of the Astrolabe_.
45.

_Example written about 1385--to be compared with that of 1555, on p.
87_.
"And thus this companie of muses iblamed casten wrothly the chere dounward to the yerth, and shewing by rednesse their shame, thei passeden sorowfully the thresholde.

And I of whom the sight plounged in teres was darked, so that I ne might not know what that woman was, of so Imperial aucthoritie, I woxe all abashed and stonied, and cast my sight doune to the yerth, and began still for to abide what she would doen afterward."-- CHAUCER: _Version from Boethius: Johnson's Hist.

of E.L._, p.


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