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Ivanhoe (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)

Page 66

by Walter Scott


  eb Shield with heraldic design.

  ec Without the benefit of confessing their sins and receiving the divine sacrament.

  ed Ornamented belt worn over the shoulder.

  ee Norman war cry. Mount Joye was the standard (mounted banner or flag) of the early French kings, ritually presented to them on eve of battle by the Abbot of St. Denis in Paris (French).

  ef Type of thin silk.

  eg God be with you (Latin).

  eh Half-leap (French).

  ei French coin of small value.

  ej That is, God’s promise to Abraham that his descendants would create a great nation (the Bible, Genesis 12:1-3).

  ek Elsewhere called Gilbert; presumably Scott’s error.

  el Befuddled.

  em French coin.

  en Magpie.

  eo To put hands on the servants of the Lord (Latin).

  ep I excommunicate you (Latin).

  eq That good-for-nothing (Latin).

  er Used for curling hair.

  es A commissary is said to have received similar consolation from a certain commander-in-chief, to whom he complained that a general officer had used some such threat towards him as that in the text [author’s note].

  et God save you, worthy reverend (Latin).

  eu That is, November 30, when the church traditionally began collecting tithes; coming at a convenient date in the year, after harvest, it became a common date for settling debts of all kinds.

  ev That is, assist in doing evil.

  ew When needed, and to ward off the cold (Latin).

  ex Notorious robber (Latin).

  ey Sacred objects (Latin).

  ez Chivalric heroes of popular romance.

  fa Knights of the Arthurian legend.

  fb Expensive furs.

  fc St. Mary the Virgin, founded in London in 1185.

  fd See the 13th chapter of Leviticus [author’s note].

  fe On the Reading of Letters.

  ff Aymer, Prior of Saint Mary of Jorvaulx.

  fg May the devouring lion ever be crushed (Latin).

  fh Signs and spells.

  fi The edict which he quotes is against communication with women of light character [author’s note].

  fj Wench.

  fk The gift of loving thanks (French).

  fl That is, caught in the act.

  fm Hospital (literally, House of God).

  fn Come let us sing to the Lord (Latin).

  fo The reader is again referred to the rules of the poor military brotherhood of the Temple, which occur in the Works of St. Bernard.—L. T. [author’s note].

  fp Fortune-telling by the drawing of lots.

  fq Essoine signifies excuse, and here relates to the appellant’s privilege of appearing by her champion, in excuse of her own person on account of her sex [author’s note].

  fr Turkish coin.

  fs Blood-letting.

  ft Anglo-Saxon coin.

  fu Shielded.

  fv That is, the Holy Spirit.

  fw Sheltered, protected side (nautical terminology).

  fx War horse.

  fy Fruit of the Times (a fifteenth-century historical text).

  fz Dried cod.

  ga Short sword.

  gb Making faces.

  gc Short love song.

  gd Medieval musical scale.

  ge Type of helmet.

  gf Hamstrung.

  gg I confess (Latin).

  gh The right to cut down trees and hunt deer.

  gi Good-humored.

  gj Forerunner of the nun’s habit.

  gk Bless me ... Death of my life (Latin).

  gl Throat, gullet.

  gm Literally, room of the forgotten (French); a dungeon cell.

  gn A tregetour is a magician, juggler.

  go Bell rung during the Mass.

  gp Flat cap, like a beret.

  gq That is, the prayer book (Latin).

  gr Substitution.

  gs Do your duty, proud knights (French).

  gt Your will be done (Latin).

  gu Why do the heathen rage? (Latin; from the Bible, Psalm 2:1).

  gv In spite of.

  gw “Dissertation on Romance and Minstrelsy,” prefixed to Ritson’s Ancient Metrical Romances, p. clxxxvii [author’s note].

  gx A tulchan is a calf’s skin stuffed, and placed before a cow who has lost its calf, to induce the animal to part with her milk. The resemblance between such a tulchan and a bishop named to transmit the temporalities of a benefice to some powerful patron is easily understood [author’s note].

 

 

 


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