The romance of Guy of Warwick. The second or 15th-century version. Edited from the paper ms. Ff. 2. 38. in the University Library, Cambridge, by Dr. Julius Zupitza ...

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Title
The romance of Guy of Warwick. The second or 15th-century version. Edited from the paper ms. Ff. 2. 38. in the University Library, Cambridge, by Dr. Julius Zupitza ...
Publication
London,: Pub. for the Early English Text Society, by N. Trübner & Co.,
1875-6.
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"The romance of Guy of Warwick. The second or 15th-century version. Edited from the paper ms. Ff. 2. 38. in the University Library, Cambridge, by Dr. Julius Zupitza ..." In the digital collection Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ANZ4364.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 7, 2025.

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When þat hys deþe day was ycome, He clepyd anon to hys grome: 'Lefe felowe,' then seyde he, 'To Warwykk þou wende, y prey þe. Line 10580 To the cowntas þou schalt goon On my message ryght anon. Thys rynge, [MS. Thys halfe rynge.] þou hyt not forȝete And on my behalfe þou hur grete Line 10584 And sey to hur, þat þe same pylgryme, That sche sende bothe bredde and wyne, And sey to hur, for that presente Thys rynge y haue to hur sente. Line 10588 Y wot well, sche wyll hyt knowe Also soon, as þou doyst hyt to hur schowe. [MS. schewe.] Then anon sche wyll aske the, And a ryche gyfte þou schalt haue,' seyde he. Line 10592 'Aftur me hur askynge schall be mest, [MS. moest.] And þou schalt sey, that in þe foreste An ermyte y am and in poynt to dye And þeryn þat thou me sye; Line 10596 And þat þere þou longe ne dwelle, But ȝyt þou schalt hur telle, That sche hastely to me come; For dethe me hath nygh ouercome. Line 10600 Go now þy [MS. þey.] wey, for seynt Charyte:

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To Iesu Cryste now y betake the.' ¶ Now ys the page forthe goon: To Warwyck he came anoon. Line 10604 The cowntas he fonde in hur halle: On knees to hur soone can he falle. 'Lysten to me, lady, now, y prey the: A message ys sente to yow by me [folio 229b:2] Line 10608 Fro my lorde, that pylgryme, That was in yowre halle in hys slauyn And þat ye sende to plente of mete. To grete yow well he wyll not forgete. Line 10612 Now he ys dwellyng in þe foreste: By ȝerbes and rootys he leuyth mest. [MS. moest.] Lyfe he ledyth, as man well wyse: Of goddys grace fulfyllyd he ys. Line 10616 Thys same rynge to yow he sente, That y to yow take now in presente.' ¶ The rynge to hur sche can brayde: 'Gode felowe,' to hym sche sayde— Line 10620 'Allas, lefe lorde, now mercy! Thys was my lordys rynge, syr Gye.' In swownyng she fell and hur hert agroos, And, when þat sche of swownyng aroos: Line 10624 'Thys tokyn y knowe, þat to me ys broȝt. For my loue, ne heyle hyt noght And tresowre þou schalt haue, y telle þe, The soþe yf þou wylt sey to me.' Line 10628 'In þe foreste,' he seyde wyth wordys mylde, 'Wyth þe bestys wode and wylde There he lyueth, [MS. lyeth.] be god aboue; And he beseketh yow for loue, Line 10632 That he be beryed þorow yowre redde; For there he lyeth almost dedde; And þat ye bewrye hym to no wyght: So he me badde, syr Gye, þe knyght. Line 10636

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Line 10636 And ye schall dye not longe to: He sende me to yow to sey so. Of myrthys ye schull haue þe meest In the yoye, þat euyr schall laste.' [folio 230a:1] Line 10640 ¶ Furste for sorow sche was nye madde And syþen sche became full gladde, That sche schulde hur lorde see, And a dolefuller loker may none be: Line 10644 That sche schulde see hym dedd, Hur harte was heuyer, þen þe ledde. Vpon a palfrey sche lepte anoon And hastyly forthe can sche goon. Line 10648 Forþe she rode wyth knyȝt, squyere and page, Tyll sche came to that ermytage. There þat lady dud feyre alyght, And so dud many a gentyll knyght, Line 10652 Erlys, barons, and abbottys tho, Archebyschopes and byschoppes also. ¶ The cowntas lyȝt downe in grete hye And, hur lordys body when sche sye, Line 10656 Wondurly hygh [hyght written originally, but the last letter blotted out.] sche caste vp a crye. Wyth þat hys eyen openyd syr Gye: Vp he loked anon ryȝt [The abbreviation for and blotted out after ryȝt.] And clepyd Felyce, as he myght, Line 10660 And helde vp boþe hys handys Before þat lady, as sche standys, In tokenyng hur mercy for to crye Of þe sorowe, sche dud for him drye. Line 10664 Hedde to hedde þere lay they thoo: Swetely eyther kyssed other also. But oon worde Gye þere ne speke, And þe [þen originally, but the n blotted out in MS.] goost þen fro hym breke. Line 10668 ¶ When þat hys sowle fro hym wente,

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Seynt Myghell anon hyt hente: As a whyte dowve, [v in dowve altered from n in MS.] he toke hyt þere. [folio 230a:2] To god in heuen he dud hyt bere Line 10672 Wyth grete yoye and mery songe: 'Gloria in excelsys' þey seyde amonge. ¶ That louely lady, Felys la Belle, [MS. ffelysabelle.] Wyth dolefull harte dwellyþ in þat chapelle. Line 10676 On hym sche swowned in þat place And often sche kyssyd hym mowþe and face. 'Thes be þe hondys,' sche seyde thoo, 'That the rynges breke atwoo.' Line 10680 Of hur fyngers þe blode owt ranne: Sorowe and woo sche had than. ¶ Grete worschyp þere god hym dudde, Syr Gye, þat ys in þat blessed stude. Line 10684 Of Gye a sauour spronge at þe laste And hath so grete swetnes caste, As and all þe spycys, þat man may see, And all swete þyngys, þat here may bee, Line 10688 In oon stude togedur were, Swete and swote bothe in fere. So swete a þyng in erthe was noon, As of hys body then can goon. Line 10692 They þat were in grete sykenes, Heele þey had þorow þat swetnesse. The swetnesse lasted, wythowten lees, Tyll þat the body beryed wes. [MS. was.] Line 10696 ¶ To Warwyk þen þey wolde hym haue dyȝt, But remeve hym þere no man myght; For thretty knyghtys þere were broght And hym remeve myght þey noght. Line 10700 All þat was þorow goddys wylle, And þey hym þere beleuyd stylle. [folio 230b:1] Felyce, that was feyre and free,

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To þem sche seyde: 'now letteth bee. Line 10704 He sente me a sonde be a messengere, That y [s blotted out after y in MS.] hym schulde berye here.' A through þey ordeyned gode and fyne Hys body and bones to berye þeryn. Line 10708 Thretty masses þere were songe, And almes dudde to oolde and ȝonge, That euyr lasteth vnto þys day: Ther ys none soche geuyn for man nor may. Line 10712 ¶ When þe body was leyde in grownde, Thens þey wente in a lytull stownde. But þe cowntas, sche leuyd there: Fro þens on lyue go wolde sche nere. Line 10716 Fro þat place neuyr sche go nolde, But þere to serue god sche wolde. Forty dayes there leuyd þat lady And beryed sche was be gode syr Gye. Line 10720 In oon pytte þey lye togedur boo: Iesu kepe þer sowlys from woo. And all, þat here oght of thys, God of hys grace grawnt þem blys. Line 10724 ¶ Now, lordyngys, ye haue harde of Gye Of Warwyk, þat was wondur hardy, And also of feyre Felyce, hys wyfe, That he moste louyd of women on lyue, Line 10728 And in what maner þey partyd in twoo And how þey leued [MS. loued.] then alsoo And how þey dredde god almyght: Euery synfull schulde so wyth ryght. Line 10732 As ye haue herde me rede or þys, [folio 230b:2] Ther lyfes þus þere endyd ys. Iesu Cryste all weldynge, That art god and crowned kynge Line 10736 (In trynyte þou art þe fadur fre And all knytt in oon persones thre),

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We the beseche lowde and stylle, That þou vs grawnt þorow þy wylle Line 10740 To be also safe, as [part of an y blotted out before as in MS.] ys Gyown Of Warwykk, þat bolde baroun. To Mary mylde prey we for þan, That sche wyll helpe euery synfull man, Line 10744 That god forgeue vs owre synnes all, That we all day beyth yn yfalle, And that owre sowles we mote hym sende, When we owte of þys worlde schull wende. Line 10748
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