Search results

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Search tips

Wikisource recommends that users of this site amend their default search preferences. We recommend that you use the setting

  • Redirect mode with subphrase matching (advanced).

This setting allows searching subpages and redirects for your search term.

Wikisource reproduces many fiction and non-fiction works using content in subpages, placed under the title page of the work. This can include poetry, essays, biographical and scientific articles, etc. For this reason, your search term may not display or may not be prioritised if you use the default search setting.

Showing results for manual havelok. No results found for Manuel Halvelik.
  • of similar publications. The philological importance of his edition of ‘Havelok the Dane,’ 1828, is only surpassed by his publication for the Society of...
    395 bytes (984 words) - 18:26, 31 October 2022
  • printed for the first time entire; with Appendix, containing the Lay of Havelok the Dane, the Legend of Ernwulf, and Life of Hereward the Saxon’ (1850...
    353 bytes (2,999 words) - 12:46, 28 December 2020
  • Middle English maugre, with a genitive; as maugre þin, in spite of thee, in Havelok, ll. 1128, 1789.—M. 1754. 'Which is against the respect due to your law...
    25 KB (4,134 words) - 10:00, 11 October 2021
  • direction of grouped feet and rhymes. This is further emphasized in Horn and Havelok, and' in the smoother octosyllabics of the 14th-century metrical romances...
    362 bytes (8,729 words) - 19:04, 12 October 2023
  • substantive. There are other instances of its use. 'Yif I late him liues go'; Havelok, 509. i. e. if I let him go away alive. And again lyues = alive, in Piers...
    32 KB (5,352 words) - 19:11, 26 November 2022
  • far beyond the compass of these Islands. It is less surprising to find Havelok and Horn extolled in similar manner, for they were after all of viking...
    557 bytes (8,374 words) - 01:45, 26 January 2021
  • lordly French; in that language her own old legends, such as those of Havelok and Horn, had been enshrined for more than a hundred years. It was in French...
    397 bytes (19,311 words) - 08:31, 19 January 2014
  • Singer, but Sir F. Madden, in his Reply to Mr. Singer's remarks upon Havelok the Dane, accumulated such a mass of evidence upon the subject as to set...
    64 KB (10,959 words) - 10:06, 11 October 2021
  • traditions form the basis of King Horn, Guy of Warwick, Bevis of Hamtoun and Havelok, though the stories were first put into literary form by Anglo-Norman poets...
    546 bytes (55,433 words) - 04:02, 14 November 2021
  • accents, which was already in use before Chaucer's time, as in the poem of Havelok the Dane, Robert of Brunne's Handling Synne, Hampole's Pricke of Conscience...
    175 KB (27,629 words) - 19:10, 26 November 2022