Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2023
Described Thomas James 283, Bernard 282; Stanley S. 7; Nasmith 188; James, Corpus 188; Kenneth Sisam, Studies in the History of Old English Literature (Oxford, 1953), pp. 175–178; Ker, Anglo-Saxon 43; Pope, pp. 59–62; Laing, p. 22; Clemoes, pp. 36–37; Budny 37; Gneuss 58.
[1]
p. 408
Þine mot ihc gon mayde sƿeete lef ƿine mot hi.
Two lines of ME which Ker dates to early 13th c., in lower margin of an Anglo-Saxon homily.
MS s. xi1. ME lines above, s. xiii in. Medieval provenance not known, but Budny (pp. 572–573) gives some weight to M.R. James's suggestion that the MS may have come to Parker from John Scory, Bishop of Hereford. MS given by Matthew Parker.
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