“No thyng ys to man so dere
As wommanys love yn gode manere.
A gode womman is mannys blys.”
Source: Handlyng Synne, Line 1905.
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Robert Mannyng 6
English chronicler 1275–1338Related quotes

Francis Escudero Twitter feed: @SayChiz (12:58 p.m. 2015 May 3).
2015, Twitter Feed

Very often it has come to my mind what men of learning there were formerly throughout England, both in religious and secular orders; and how there were happy times then throughout England; and how the kings, who had authority over this people, obeyed God and his messengers; and how they not only maintained their peace, morality and authority at home but also extended their territory outside; and how they succeeded both in warfare and in wisdom; and also how eager were the religious orders both in teaching and in learning as well as in all the holy services which it was their duty to perform for God; and how people from abroad sought wisdom and instruction in this country; and how nowadays, if we wished to acquire these things, we would have to seek them outside.
Source: Preface to his translation of Gregory the Great's Pastoral Care, p. 124.
If those men who to be lovers pretend
Behaved more faithfully and did not lie,
And dreaded to deceive or to offend,
Then women might not choose to pass them by.
But each man's heart's a fickle butterfly
Which can alight on one just a short while.
Can it be wrong in this case to beguile?
"The Letter of Cupid", line 267; vol. 1, p. 83; translation from Thelma S. Fenster and Mary Carpenter Erler (eds.) Poems of Cupid, God of Love (Leiden: Brill, 1990) p. 191.

Preface to Sir Thomas Malory Le Morte Darthur (1485); cited from Sir Thomas Malory (ed. Eugène Vinaver) Works (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978) p. xiv.

Ælla; a Tragycal Enterlude, "Mynstrelles Songe", line 54.