| Thomas Wright - English language - 1857 - 512 pages
...390 DIS DISORDINATE. (ï) (Lai.) Disorderly. (2) Excessive ; illegal. Disordinaunce, irregularity. For the whiche the peple of the londe were gretely...dysordinate dethe that he used, contrarye to the lawe of tlie londe. WarJeworth's Chronicle. DISOÜR, i. (1) (A.-N.) A teller of tales. (2) (A.-N.) A player... | |
| Thomas Wright - English language - 1857 - 534 pages
...(Lat.) Disorderly. (2) Excessive ; illégal. Dlsordinaunce, irregularity. For thé whiche thé pépie of the londe were gretely displesyd ; and evere afterwarde...the erle of Worcestre was gretely behatede emonge thé pépie, for ther dysordinale dethe that he used, contrarye to the lawe of the londe. Warlworth's... | |
| English language - 1886 - 532 pages
...Excessive ; illegal. Disordinaunce, irregularity. For the whiche tlie peple of the londe were eretely displesyd ; and evere afterwarde the erle of Worcestre was gretely behatede emonge the peple, for ther dysortlitiatc dethe that he used, con-- trarye to the lawe of the londe. Warlnaorth's Chronicle. DISOUR,... | |
| Leslie Stephen - Great Britain - 1898 - 488 pages
...condemnedthem,and after they were hanged, drawn, and quartered, caused their heads and bodies to be impaled, ' for the whiche the peple of the londe were gretely displesyd, and evere afterwarde the Erie of Wurcestre was gretely behatede emonge the peple, for ther dysordinate deth that he used contrarye... | |
| Kenneth Hotham Vickers - Great Britain - 1918 - 574 pages
...drawn, quartered, and beheaded with the usual brutality of the age, but their bodies had been impaled "for the whiche the peple of the londe were gretely displesyd, and evere afterwarde the Earl of Worcestre was gretely behatede emonge the peple for ther dysordinate dethe that he used, contrarye... | |
| Raluca L. Radulescu - Literary Criticism - 2003 - 182 pages
...England in at the time of his achievement of the sword in the stone and his subsequent coronation: 164 for the whiche the peple of the londe were gretely displesyd; and evere afterwarde the Er1e of Worcestre was gretely behatede emonge the peple, for ther dysordinate dethe that he used, contrarye... | |
| Mark D. Meyerson, Daniel Thiery, Oren Falk - History - 2004 - 336 pages
...by the leggy s, and a stake made scharpe at bothe endes, whereof one ende was putt in att buttokys, and the other ende ther heddes were putt uppe one;...afterwarde the Erle of Worcestre was gretely behatede [hated] emonge the peple, for ther dysordinate [immoderate] dethe that he used, contrarye to the lawe... | |
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