Page:The Sources of Standard English.djvu/26

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Contents.
xxi


A.D. page
1380. Wickliffe's version of the Bible 265
Young one, wast, shipwreck, haply 266
His Latin idioms bad 267
Purvey and Hereford 268
New forms used at this time 269
1400. Creed and Prayers 270
1408. Forms of Matrimony 271
1450. Lollard Tract on Scriptural translation 272
The Speech of the Court 273
1390. Chaucer's new forms 274
Belike, bi and bi, scarcely, menes 275
1432. Letters written by knights - Warwick 276
Suffolk's letter to his son 277
1447. East Anglian Letters - Shillingford 278
1450. Pecock's Repressor 279
The Word unless - Good Prose 280
1460. Yorkshire letters of the time 281
1426. Audlay in Salop 282
1454. York's children at Ludlow 283
1471. Caxton prints the First English Book 284
He restores the hard g 285
1481. His Renard the Fox 286
1482. He alters Trevisa's words 287
1523. Lord Berners - Tyndale 288
1525. Corruptions in his Testament 289
Once, father, coulde, righteous 290
Abroad, waves, sad, roll 291
Tyndale's sound Teutonic style 292
1542. His version disliked by Gardiner 293
His wrangles with More 294
1528. His critical power - Roy's rimes 295
1536. Plumpton's letter home 296
English Poetry becomes more Teutonic 297
1524. Abbot Malvern's verses 298
Theology, the Classics, Travels 299
1560. Cranmer's Prayer Book 300
Latin and Teutonic in our Bible 301