For þen sálle na gode mán,
Þat any góde lare cán,
Þár-fore blame þé.
In the same stanza The Feest (Hazlitt, Remains, iii. 93) is written.
Still more frequently such lines were used for extended tail-rhyme-stanzas rhyming on the scheme a a a b c c c b d d d b e e e b, as e.g. in a poem, The Enemies of Mankind, of the beginning of the fourteenth century, published by Kölbing (Engl. Studien, ix. 440 ff.).
The first stanza runs as follows:
Þe sìker sóþe who so séys,
Wiþ dìol dréye we our dáys
And wàlk máni wil wáys