[48] Go. So in Epilogue—
"With violent hands he that his life doth end,
His damned soul to endless night doth wend."
Again, in the "Return from Parnassus," 1600, act v. sc. 4—
"These my companions still with me must wend."
In "George a Green Pinner of Wakefield," [Dyce's "Greene and Peele," 1861, p. 259, &c.]—
"Wilt thou leave Wakefield and wend with me …
So will I wend with Robin all along …
For you are wrong, and may not wend this way."
And in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales," Prologue, line 19—
"Byfel, that, on that sesoun on a day,
In Southwerk at the Tabbard as I lay,
Redy to wenden on my pilgrimage,
To Canturbury with ful devout corage."
[49] Alexander.
[50] Hector.