"You lived in the swamp, they bury you behind the fence" Judith Zaltsman, the protagonist of Paula Prilutski's 1912 proto-feminist melodrama
Eyne fun yene (One of Those), recently given a freshly imagined staged reading at YIVO, is lamenting her fate as a twice-fallen women.
ik geue Michel Sittow
eyne brantrode vnde 2 lengehaken (poletusraud ja 2 pikka haaki voi konksu).
Mais aujourd'hui, si je devais mourir demain, j'aimerais etre incineree et etre repandue moitie au Maroc, pres de chez nous sur une petite colline sur la route du ranch d'Addarouch, et moitie en France, sur le Cambre d'Aze, une montagne des Pyrenees, pres d'un petit village,
Eyne, ou j'aurais aime vivre (au moment de l'entretien Rose, Francaise, avait 30 ans et vivait en concubinage avec Ali, Marocain, 30 ans.
obsolete plural
eyne, now eyes, [auga, Gothick; eag, Saxon; oog, Dutch; ee, Scottish, plur.
Sche sey wyth hir bodily
eyne many white thyngys flying al a-bowte hir on euery syde as thykke in a maner as motys in the sunne.
Thou wall, O wall, O sweet and lovely wall, Show me thy chink, to blink through with mine
eyne!
For dairy maids would cattle drive To summer pastures green, And in their hands a Rowan rod Protecting cattle from the evil
eyne.
Oft did she heave her napkin to her
eyne, Which on it had conceited characters, Laund'ring the silken figures in the brine That seasoned woe had pelleted in tears, And often reading what contents it bears; As often shrieking undistinguished woe In clamours of all size, both high and low.
38) that appears is likewise colorful in a conventionally feminine way: "the rose in the cheek, the blue in the
eyne, / The yellow in the tress" (ll.