"Full well she sang the servicè divine Entunèd in hire nose ful swetèly."

Mr Horne must needs say—

"Entuned in her nose with accent sweet."

The accent, to our ears, is lost in the pious snivel—pardon the somewhat unclerical word.

Chaucer says of her—-

"Ful semèly after hire meat she raught,"

which Mr Horne improves into—-

"And for her meat Full seemly bent she forward on her seat."

Chaucer says—