Lo he hangeth on y e crosse despoyled of all [...] and sheweth to vs all his woundes y e he s [...] Be we therfore kynde / that we may suff [...] some penaunce / and that at the daye of d [...] saye thus. Haue we not done penaunce i [...] he that suffreth payne for the loue of god [...] an hondred tymes more rewarde / and al [...] [...] tayne euerlastyngs lyfe / vnto the whiche [...] you and me and all mankynde. Amen.

THere dwelled somtyme in Rome [...] named Pōpey / whiche had [...] called Aglas. This doughter had [...] [...] boue all other women of that Empyre. [...] fayre & gracyous in the syght of euery [...] also swyfte in rennynge / that no man m [...] [...] her by a great space. Whan the Emper [...] [...] these two vertues in his doughter / he [...] [...] full / wherfore he made to proclayme thr [...] Empyre / that what man poore or rych [...] with his doughter / shold haue her to w [...] [...] ryches / yf he myght ouer renne her & c [...] marke than she / & yf she ouer renne hym to the marke than he / his heed sholde [...] Whan the states of y e empyre / as duke [...] and knyghtes herd this crye / they offr [...] [...] after an other to renne w t her / but euer ouer ranne them al / wherfore they los [...] [...] cordynge to y e lawe. That tyme there w [...] [...] dwellynge in Rome / whiche thought [...] I am a poore man and cōme of poore [...] made a cōmune crye / y t what man so [...]

This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal. The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.