| A................110 | |
| Tr 4 6 And whan a wight is from hire whiel ythrowe, | 6 |
| Tr 4 33 That Ector, with ful many a bold baroun, | 32 |
| Tr 4 34 Caste on a day with Grekis for to fighte, | 34 |
| Tr 4 38 But on a day, wel armed, brighte, and shene, | 38 |
| Tr 4 39 Ector and many a worthi wight out wente, | 38 |
| Tr 4 56 Dredden to lese a gret part of hire joie. | 56 |
| Tr 4 58 A tyme of trewe, and tho they gonnen trete | 58 |
| Tr 4 68 And with a chaunged face hem bad a boone, | 68 |
| Tr 4 68 And with a chaunged face hem bad a boone, | 68 |
| Tr 4 76 For dredeles, thorugh yow shal in a stownde | 76 |
| Tr 4 92 " Save of a doughter that I lefte, allas, | 92 |
| Tr 4 189 Daun Antenor -- a wrong wey now ye chese -- | 188 |
| Tr 4 221 But if it were a man of his or two | 220 |
| Tr 4 235 Ful lik a ded ymage, pale and wan; | 234 |
| Tr 4 252 Shop me to ben a lyves creature! " | 252 |
| Tr 4 285 To reve a wight that most is to hym deere, | 284 |
| Tr 4 332 To ben a Grek, syn thow art born Troian? | 332 |
| Tr 4 337 A thousand sikes, hotter than the gleede, | 336 |
| Tr 4 343 He feleth non, but lith forth in a traunce. | 342 |
| Tr 4 350 But in a rees to Troilus he wente. | 350 |
| Tr 4 351 A certeyn knyght that for the tyme kepte | 350 |
| Tr 4 374 And with a sorwful noise he seyde thus, | 374 |
| Tr 4 384 Who wolde have wend that in so litel a throwe | 384 |
| Tr 4 398 A frendly cheere or lokyng of an eye, | 398 |
| Tr 4 423 Or elles selde seynge of a wight, | 422 |
| Tr 4 437 Were wel sittyng, if that I were a fend -- | 436 |
| Tr 4 438 To traysen a wight that trewe is unto me! | 438 |
| Tr 4 464 As he that, whan a wight is wo bygon, | 464 |
| Tr 4 465 He cometh to hym a paas and seith right thus: | 464 |
| Tr 4 467 Thow moost me first transmewen in a ston, | 466 |
| Tr 4 478 How that it sholde a lasse peyne be | 478 |
| Tr 4 520 As licour out of a lambyc ful faste; | 520 |
| Tr 4 534 To take a womman which that loveth the | 534 |
| Tr 4 536 Now is nat this a nyce vanitee? | 536 |
| Tr 4 538 And kith thow art a man; for in this houre | 538 |
| Tr 4 558 For syn my fader, in so heigh a place | 558 |
| Tr 4 562 With violence, if I do swich a game; | 562 |
| Tr 4 586 I nolde sette at al that noys a grote! | 586 |
| Tr 4 594 And rather be in blame a lite ifounde | 594 |
| Tr 4 595 Than sterve here as a gnat, withouten wounde. | 594 |
| Tr 4 603 " And though thy lady wolde a lite hire greve, | 602 |
| Tr 4 609 A love; and whi shaltow nat have another? | 608 |
| Tr 4 617 " Forthi tak herte, and thynk right as a knyght: | 616 |
| Tr 4 623 And if thow deye a martyr, go to hevene! | 622 |
| Tr 4 625 Theigh ich and al my kyn upon a stownde | 624 |
| Tr 4 626 Shulle in a strete as dogges liggen dede, | 626 |
| Tr 4 627 Thorugh-girt with many a wid and blody wownde; | 626 |
| Tr 4 628 In every cas I wol a frend be founde. | 628 |
| Tr 4 629 And if the list here sterven as a wrecche, | 628 |
| Tr 4 682 So to Criseyde of wommen com a route, | 682 |
| Tr 4 684 And with hire tales, deere ynough a myte, | 684 |
| Tr 4 727 Right as a man is esed for to feele | 726 |
| Tr 4 753 After the deth she cryed a thousand sithe, | 752 |
| Tr 4 756 She held hireself a forlost creature. | 756 |
| Tr 4 765 How sholde a fissh withouten water dure? | 764 |
| Tr 4 767 How sholde a plaunte or lyves creature | 766 |
| Tr 4 769 For which ful ofte a by-word here I seye, | 768 |
| Tr 4 810 Unto Criseyde, in a ful secree wise, | 810 |
| Tr 4 826 Tho gan she pleyne a thousand tymes more. | 826 |
| Tr 4 855 Tornede hire tho Criseyde, a wo makynge | 854 |
| Tr 4 856 So gret that it a deth was for to see. | 856 |
| Tr 4 869 Aboute hire eyen two a purpre ryng | 868 |
| Tr 4 871 That to biholde it was a dedly thyng; | 870 |
| Tr 4 929 What helpeth it to wepen ful a strete, | 928 |
| Tr 4 931 Bet is a tyme of cure ay than of pleynte. | 930 |
| Tr 4 947 Til in a temple he fond hym al allone, | 946 |
| Tr 4 985 For yf ther myghte ben a variaunce | 984 |
| Tr 4 1023 " For if ther sitte a man yond on a see, | 1022 |
| Tr 4 1023 " For if ther sitte a man yond on a see, | 1022 |
| Tr 4 1063 Now trewely, that is a fals sentence, | 1062 |
| Tr 4 1065 " What myght I wene, and I hadde swich a thought, | 1064 |
| Tr 4 1073 That right as whan I wot ther is a thyng, | 1072 |
| Tr 4 1075 Ek right so, whan I woot a thyng comyng, | 1074 |
| Tr 4 1087 I! Who say evere a wis man faren so? | 1086 |
| Tr 4 1093 " Hastow nat lyved many a yer byforn | 1092 |
| Tr 4 1100 " And yet this is a wonder most of alle, | 1100 |
| Tr 4 1105 A man may al bytyme his nekke beede | 1104 |
| Tr 4 1119 And forthi put thyn herte a while in reste, | 1118 |
| Tr 4 1179 And this was hym a pregnant argument | 1178 |
| Tr 4 1231 And seyde, " O mercy, God! Lo, which a dede! | 1230 |
| Tr 4 1237 I nolde a forlong wey on lyve have be | 1236 |
| Tr 4 1255 " That if a wight alwey his wo compleyne | 1254 |
| Tr 4 1261 " I am a womman, as ful wel ye woot, | 1260 |
| Tr 4 1272 But what is thanne a remede unto this, | 1272 |
| Tr 4 1278 For, dredeles, withinne a wowke or two | 1278 |
| Tr 4 1280 By alle right and in a wordes fewe, | 1280 |
| Tr 4 1289 " Makyng alwey a protestacioun | 1288 |
| Tr 4 1302 And lat us shape a bettre wey to fynde. | 1302 |
| Tr 4 1305 But hym byhoveth somtyme han a peyne | 1304 |
| Tr 4 1308 Than I may ride ayeyn on half a morwe, | 1308 |
| Tr 4 1312 Syn wel ye woot that it is now a trewe -- | 1312 |
| Tr 4 1383 It sent is from a frend of his or tweye, | 1382 |
| Tr 4 1413 And don my red withinne a day or tweye, | 1412 |
| Tr 4 1458 Byfore a crepel, for he kan the craft; | 1458 |
| Tr 4 1470 To trusten on nys but a fantasie. | 1470 |
| Tr 4 1472 To ben a wif; and as he kan wel preche, | 1472 |
| Tr 4 1485 " Ye shal ek seen so many a lusty knyght | 1484 |
| Tr 4 1495 A good opynyoun, if that ye wende, | 1494 |
| Tr 4 1500 A thousand tymes mercy I yow preye; | 1500 |
| Tr 4 1511 Thus mene I: that it were a gret folie | 1510 |
| Tr 4 1527 Criseyde, with a sik, right in this wise | 1526 |
| Tr 4 1589 And she ne daunteth no wight but a wrecche. | 1588 |
| Tr 4 1612 To spende a tyme, a tyme for to wynne; | 1612 |
| Tr 4 1612 To spende a tyme, a tyme for to wynne; | 1612 |
| Tr 4 1614 Though that we ben a day or two atwynne. | 1614 |
| Tr 4 1625 " But certes, I am naught so nyce a wight | 1624 |
| Tr 4 1626 That I ne kan ymaginen a wey | 1626 |
| Tr 4 1628 For who may holde a thing that wol awey? | 1628 |
| Tr 4 1636 That of so good a confort and a cheere | 1636 |
| Tr 4 1636 That of so good a confort and a cheere | 1636 |