[...]
[...]
In hono
[...]
[...]
[...]nto your
[...]
Yf for the fury
[...]
Thou hast more
[...]
For thylke
[...]
Than hath ou
[...]
[...]
Of rome Cesar
[...]
Though her name
[...]
Her ydel fame to thyn
[...]
Therfore reioyce & he ri
[...]
[...]
O nazareth of name mo
[...]
[...]
For out of the flo
[...]
[...]
Most ful of grace som
[...]
[...]
Of the whiche fully reme
[...]
[...]
So longe agoon spake holy
[...]
When that he
sayd in hie
[...]
[...]
Hyr hope of tris
[...]
[...] mayn
[...]ynable
Rotyd
[...] god by
[...]yt sykernesse
Whos charite so longe gan hym
[...]resse
That by to go
[...]
hasted ranne
[...]he fyre
With he
[...]te of clennesse to aske by desyre
Strong in
[...] prudent in gouernaunc
[...]
She
had also
conueyed wyth clennesse
And sollemynly she
had a
[...]aunce
In al her werk ye with grete aduysidnesse
And
[...]er
anexyd
[...] rightwysnes
With
[...]
[...]te of womanly bounte
She
had of
[...] mercy and pyte
Sothfas
[...]
[...] also of charyte
As
[...] was in thought
and dede
And
[...] of virgynyte
O
[...]
[...]
[...]igne ful of lowlyhede
As humbl
[...] of chere and
[...]enyne of d
[...]de
[...]ent of speche
[...] she lyst to shewe
Large of sentence & but of wordes fewe
To pu
[...] and
[...] that was euer hyr lyf
Of
[...] by deuocion
To
god
[...] thought contemplatyf
Sh
[...] feruent euer in her entencion
And ydel neuer from occupacion
And
[...]ally to
[...] dede
Hyr hande was euer redy at the nede
And ful she was of compassyon
To rewe in alle th
[...] woo or s
[...]
Wel
wylled euer
[...] hoo
[...]e affeccion
To euery wyght so longe was hy
[...]
[...]
Sadde with all
[...] that hyr neuer as
[...]
A looke
[...] ever fayre
So close of sigh
[...]
[...] this dede
[...]
[...]
[...]anor
[...]once in y
[...]
[...]f crysts by
[...] how he
dyd wryte
[...]o god she le
[...] hyr tendyr handes whyte
Besechyng hym she myght abyde
and see
The blisful da
[...]
[...] natyuyte
[...] the b
[...] Elisabeth
That ty
[...]nd is
[...]
[...]r a vysions
I fynde how this mayde of nazareth
Sayd euery day seuen orisone
That callyd be
[...] hyr petycions
With humble herte this yonge blifful mayde
Ful lowly knelyng euyn thus she sayde
How our lady prayed to god for seuen petycions capytulo [...] quinto
[...] Blisful lorde that knowest the entente
Of euery herte in thyn eternal sight
[...] me go
[...]e the first cōmaundemeyte
[...]ulfille as it is skylle and right
[...]
[...]aunte also with herte wylle & myght
[...] my sowle and al my knowynge
[...] loue aboue al other thynge
[...]ue me myght playnly to fulfille
[...]t byddyng like to thy plesaunce
[...]or to loue with herte
and al my wylle
[...] neyghbour in dede and countenaunce
[...]ht as my self with euery circumstaunce
[...] here with al for / Ioye woo or smerte
[...]
[...]ou louest to loue with al myn herte