Welcome to PhiloLogic  
   home |  the ARTFL project |  download |  documentation |  sample databases |   
T. Matthew [1549], The Byble, that is to say all the holy Scripture: In whych are c&obar;tayned the Olde and New Testamente, truely ∧ purely tr&abar;slated into English, ∧ nowe lately with greate industry ∧ dilig&ebar;ce recognised. [Edited by Edmund Becke.] (Imprinted by... Ihon Daye [etc.] and William Seres [etc.], London) [word count] [B05000].
To look up a word in a dictionary, select the word with your mouse and press 'd' on your keyboard.

Previous section

Next section

The .xli. Chapter. The disposycyon and deuyce of buyldynge agayne the temple, ∧ of the other thynges ther to belongyng.

A   After this he brought me to the temple, and measured the postes: whyche were of both the sydes .vi. cubytes thicke, accordynge to the wydenesse of the tabernacle. The bredth of the dore was .x. cubytes and the walles of the dore on either syde fyue cubytes. He measured the length therof, which conteyned .xl. cubytes, and the bredth .xx. Then wente he in, and measured the dore postes, whyche were two cubytes thicke: but the dore it selfe was syxe cubytes, and the bredth of the dore was .xij. cubytes. He measure the length and bredth therof, whych were euery one .xx. cubytes, before the temple.

And he sayde vnto me: thys is the holyest of all. He measured also the wall of the house which was syxe cubytes. The chambres that stode ro&ubar;de aboute the house, were euery one foure cubytes wyde, ∧ one stode harde vpon another, whereof there were .xxxiij. And there stode postes beneth by the walles rounde aboute the house, to beare them vp: but in the wall of the house they were not fastened: The syde chambres were the hyer the wyder, and had steppes thorow them rounde aboute the house. Thus was it wyder aboue, that from the lowest men might go to the hyest ∧ mydd chambers. B   I sawe also that the house was very hye rounde aboute. The foundacyon of the syde chambres was a meterodde (that is syxe cubytes) brode. The thicknesse of þe; syde wall without, conteyned fyue cubytes, and so dyd the outwall of the ch&abar;bres in the house.

Betwene the chambers, was the wydenes xx. cubytes rounde aboute the house. The chambre dores stode ouer agaynst þe; outwal, the one dore was towarde the north, the other towarde the South: and the thycknesse of the outwal was .v. cubytes rounde aboute. Now the buyldynge that was separated towarde the west, was .lxx. cubytes wyde: the wall of the buyldynge was .v. cubytes thicke rounde aboute, and the length foure score cubytes ∧ ten. So he measured the house which was an. C. cubytes longe, ∧ the separated buyldynge with the wall were an .C. cubytes longe also. The wydnesse before the house and of it that was separated towarde the East, was an .C. cubytes.

C   And he measured the length of the buyldynge before and behynde wyth the ch&abar;bers vpon both the sydes: and it conteyned an .C. cubites. The yunermer temple, the porch of the fore courte, the side postes, these thre had syde wyndowes, and pylers rounde aboute ouer agaynst the postes, from the grounde vp to the wyndowes: The wyndowes them selues were syled ouer with bordes: and thus was it aboue the dore, vnto the ynmost house ∧ without also: Yee the whole wall on euery syde both within ∧ without was syled ouer with greate bordes. There were Cherubins and date trees made also, so that one date tree stode euer bewixte two Cherubins: One Cherub had two faces, D   the face of a man lokyng a syde towarde the date tre, and a lyons face on the other syde. Thus was it made rounde aboute in al the house: Yee the Cherubins ∧ date trees were made from the grounde vp aboue the dore, ∧ so stode they also vpon the wall of the temple.

The by postes of the temple were foure squared, and the fashion of the Sanctuarye was euen as it appared vnto me a fore in the vision. The table was of wodde, thre cubites hye and two cubytes longe: hys corners, the length and the walles were of wodde. And he sayde vnto me: This is the table, that shal stande before the Lorde. The temple and the holyest of all had ether of them two dores ∧ euery dore had two lytle wyckettes whyche were folden in one vpon another, on euery syde two. And vpon the dores of the temple

-- --

The t&ebar;ple. there were made Cherubins and date trees, lyke as vpon the walles: and a greate thicke balke of wodde was before on the out syde of the porche. Vp&obar; both the sydes of the walles of the porche, there were made depe windowes and date trees, hauyng beames and balkes, lyke as the house had.
Previous section

Next section


T. Matthew [1549], The Byble, that is to say all the holy Scripture: In whych are c&obar;tayned the Olde and New Testamente, truely ∧ purely tr&abar;slated into English, ∧ nowe lately with greate industry ∧ dilig&ebar;ce recognised. [Edited by Edmund Becke.] (Imprinted by... Ihon Daye [etc.] and William Seres [etc.], London) [word count] [B05000].
Powered by PhiloLogic