Die Kildare-gedichte; die ältesten mittelenglischen denkmäler in anglo-irischer überlieferung von Dr. W. Heuser ...

grymly ouer al othir come to [to ham] and with his tuskes wold haue smytten and ham slayn, yef he boldly ne hade come betwen and slayn the bore and holpid ham both. On the morowe thay went vnto the place, ther the parlement was, at a [folio 15] place that sithin ys callid O Roykes hyll. [Rorike-is hille] Frust thay heldyn thar parlement from fer by messagres goyng betwen; ther aftyr thay tokc [Ms. tok] surte and othis swar and comyne togaddyr aftirward. Natheles fewe and ylyk many on euery syd, and thay vnweppned, but the one ther swerdes, the othir thar sparys, [sparthes] and her felawchippe on euery syde fro tham. [fere fro ham] Gryffyn, that with Moryce come to the parlement, was ful thoghtfull of the vysycion [Ms. vysyc̄ōn] that he sawe; he name to hym VII knyghtis of his owyne kyne, tham that he most trust to har bolnys, and drowyn ham on the one halff of the hylle, as ney as thay myght leppyn vppene thar stedes with cheldes about har nekkes and speres yn hand, and for oon purposse pleydyn and prykkiden yn the felld ayeyne othir, so that yn what syde the parlement turneden, throgh encheyson of suche play thay myght be fondyne redy. Roryk and Hugh kepte thar parlement of many thynges, but yn no thyng thay myght acord and begone to depart as yn wreth. The traytour Roryk hade yn his thoght the treysone that he hade purueyd. He made semblant and hym [drow hym] besydes as forto pyssen and made tokyn to his men that thay hastely shold come vnto hym. Whan he this hade doone, he turnyd ayene with his spar [sparth] an hey, his face al blak with ful snell goyng. Moryche was warnyd of his eme by the vysycion that he sawe, stode and beheld al this; he tok out his swerd and cryed vppon Hughe and mynd [mynyd] hym and dyde hyme selff agayn the traytour forto defend hym. The traytour rane agayne Hughe hym for to smyte; har latymer yede betwen hym and the strok, and he smote of hym the oon arme of, fast by the shuldir. Moryce stod and camplyd with his swerde ayeyne the spar and loude cryed to har men. And har Hugh myght be in anny state hym selff forto defend, throgh gret hastyng he fell doune [doune fehlt] twies a bac [&] [& übergeschrieben im Ms.?] vnneth throght helpe of Moryce that hym defendid thus escapyd with
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Title
Die Kildare-gedichte; die ältesten mittelenglischen denkmäler in anglo-irischer überlieferung von Dr. W. Heuser ...
Author
Heuser, Wilhelm
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Page 217
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Bonn,: P. Hanstein,
1904.

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"Die Kildare-gedichte; die ältesten mittelenglischen denkmäler in anglo-irischer überlieferung von Dr. W. Heuser ..." In the digital collection Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ajt2514.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 2, 2025.
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