O hastily he gat him up, Staid neither for hose nor shoon, And he's doen him to the stable door Wi' the clear light o' the moon.
But my lord if it were in an other mannys caas than your owne and out of the mater whiche ye fauor I doubt not but that ye wold think him that shuld haue doen as ye have doen non only worthy hevy wordes but also hevy dedys.
Therewith amoued from his sober mood, 2 And liues he yet (said he) that wrought this act, And doen the heauens afford him vitall food?
For that same knights owne sword this is of yore, 2 Which Merlin made by his almightie art For that his noursling, when he knighthood swore, 4 Therewith to doen his foes eternall smart.
O he has doen him to his ha, To make him beerly cheer; An in it came a griesly ghost, Steed stappin i the fleer.
Young Bekie was as brave a knight As ever saild the sea; An he's doen him to the court of France, To serve for meat and fee.
T'ould keep all our innards warm an' cosy 'ithout us doen a hand's turn.
These be furren parts, and there be furren ways o' doen things.
But now aread, old father, why of late Didst thou behight me borne of English blood, Whom all a Faeries sonne doen nominate?
Another like faire tree eke grew thereby, 420 Whereof whoso did eat, eftsoones did know Both good and ill: O mornefull memory: That tree through one mans fault hath doen us all to dy.
Dodo is figured and described as follows: "Desen Voghel de is soo groot als een Swaen, gaven hem de naem Walchvoghel, want doen wy de leckere Duyfkens ende ande cleyn ghevoghelte ghenoech vinghen, doen taelden wy niet meer naer desen Voghel.
Young Bekie was as brave a knight As ever sail’d the sea; An’ he’s doen him to the court of France, To serve for meat and fee.
Young Bekie I Young Bekie was as brave a knight As ever sail’d the sea; And he’s doen him to the court of France, To serve for meat and fee.
And Violenta by the common opinion of the Judges was condempned to be beheaded: not only for that she had presumed to punishe the knightes tromperie and offence, but for her excessiue crueltie doen vpon the dead body.
I dare not so muche as to make any man know or vnderstand my mishap that the same might be reuenged, which beingdoen would render such content to my minde, that I should departe out of this worlde the beste satisfied mayden that euer died.
Is it well doen that you seing in me, a discretion and modestie, doe not imitate the puritie thereof?
Which doen the maister and the seruaunte wente two seuerall wayes.
And with lewd lust was overlaid; Two thingsdoen ill agree.
Yes, but they gang in more secret wise, And with sheeps' clothing doen them disguise.
Shepheards such, God might us many send, That doen so carefully their flocks tend.
The keen cold blows through my beaten hide, All as I were through the body gride: My ragged ronts all shiver and shake, As doen high towers in an earthquake: They wont in the wind wag their wriggle tails Perk as a peacock; but now it availes.
He's doen him to the Jew's castell And walkd it round about; And there he saw the Jew's daughter, At the window looking out.
Then cutted ha they their green cloathing, A little below their knee; And sae ha they their yallow hair, A little aboon there bree; And they've doenthem to haely chapel Was christened by Our Ladye.
She is doen her to her bigly bowr, As fast as she coud fare, An she has tane a sleepy draught, That she had mixed wi care.
O hastily he gat him up, Stayd neither for hose nor shoone, An he's doen him to the stable-door, Wi the clear light o the moon.
O whan the sun was now gane down, He's doen him till her bower, And there, by the lee licht o the moon, Her window she lookit oer.
Then cutted ha they their green cloathing A little below their knee, An sae ha they there yallow hair, A little aboon there bree; An they've doen them to haely chapel, Was christened by Our Lady.
She's doen her to her bigly bowr, As fast as she could gang, An she has dresst him Brown Robin Like ony bowr-woman.
But onely it may be doen by him, whiche hath his countrey stronger then that of the enemies, because when it were otherwise, he should goe to leese.
Of that on the sea, I will not presume to speake, for that I have no knowledge therof: but I will let the Genoues, and the Venecians speake therof, whome with like studies have heretofore doen great thinges.
It is most necessary, and it cannot be doen otherwise, minding to have the power, that it be the owne proper, and not to purpose to take of those, which make thereof an art.
This was doen he takyng his waie & progresse to Glocester, whereof he was before tymes Duke: the murther perpetrated, he doubed the good squire knight.
O this Moor he had but ae daughter, I wot her name was Susie Pye; She doen her to the prison house, And she's called young Beichan one word by.
She has doen her to her bigly bower As fast as she could fare; And she has ta'en a sleepy draught, That she had mix'd wi' care.
Doen is said to be a deserter from the regular army, and he has visited Cheyenne several times before, and always as a dealer in horse flesh.
Doen had put the horse up at the stable, and had stated that he meant to have him sold at auction that afternoon.
Doen seemed confused, and his confusion increased as Carr read the description from Denver, and his attempted explanations were a series of contradictions.
Doen only ran the faster, and was gaining upon his pursuers all the time.
Doen was taken to the jail and his wounds examined.
Doen was a deserter from the army, who had for several years been engaged in herding cattle on the plains, and he had accumulated some cattle of his own.
Before he died, Doen stated that he was a native of Pennsylvania, and that his real name was Edward W.
A man giving the name of John Doenbecame a victim to a fate of this kind in Cheyenne, in the summer of 1876.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "doen" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.