“Sore might hir agrise.”
Arthour and Merlin, p. 34. ed. Abbotsf.
“Of his sweuen sore him agros.”
Marie Maudelein, p. 226,—Turnbull’s Legendæ Catholicæ (from the Auchinleck MS.).
“The kinges herte of pitee gan agrise.”
Chaucer’s Man of Lawes Tale, v. 5034. ed. Tyr.
“Swiche peines, that your hertes might agrise.”
Chaucer’s Freres Tale, v. 7231. ed. Tyr.
v. 426. I dempte and drede] i. e. I deemed and dreaded.
v. 428. Than in his hode, &c.]—hode, i. e. hood.—This passage is quoted by Warton, who observes, “There is also merit in the delineation of Dissimulation ... and it is not unlike Ariosto’s manner in imagining these allegorical personages.” Hist. of E. P. ii. 349. ed. 4to.