A fals letter made the kynge And made a messangere it brynge, On the ryuer syde as they went, 476 To Torent, that was true as stele, If he loued Dyssonell wele, Gete hir a faucon gent.
And with that word this faucon gan to crye, 630 And swowned eft in Canaceës barme.
And to the tree she gooth ful hastily, And on this faucon loketh pitously, 440 And heeld hir lappe abrood, for wel she wiste The faucon moste fallen fro the twiste, When that it swowned next, for lakke of blood.
Amidde a tree fordrye, as whyt as chalk, As Canacee was pleying in hir walk, 410 Ther sat a faucon over hir heed ful hye, That with a pitous voys so gan to crye That all the wode resouned of hir cry.
Greet was the sorwe, for the haukes harme, That Canacee and alle hir wommen made; They niste how they mighte the faucon glade.
It was very late in the eueninge, when the Faucon killed the Egle, and therefore the kinge commaunded ech man to depart to the Citty.
The cause was this: one of the kyngs of that Region disposed to disporte with certayne of his noble men abrode in the Fields, went a Hauking, and with a Faucon to fly at diuers game.
Thither with sound of Trumpets hee caused the Faucon to be conueyed, where the kinge commaunded one of his noble men to place the Crowne vpon his head, for price of the excellent pray atchieued vpon the Egle.
The Battalion at first rested from its labours in the village of Hamel, its former halting place in January, from 5th to 13th April, when it returned via Villers-Faucon to take over from the Oxfords.
A cold, dense mist wrapped everything in still greater obscurity when the Battalion moved off from Villers-Faucon at 2 a.
He imagines this Faucon brode means a falcon bird, or a hawk, and that Saladin is represented with this bird on his fist to express his contempt of his adversary.
In an old romance he finds these lines, describing the duel of Saladin with Richard Coeur de Lion:-- A Faucon brode in hande he bare, For he thought he wolde thare Have slayne Richard.
And the Court told Ralph no matter 'que le feisant leva hors de le garrein, vostre faucon luy pursuy en le garrein.
After that followed the acquisition of one of Fromentin's finest works, La Chasse au Faucon en Algérie; whilst a sea-piece by Vandervelde together with the Dunes at Scheveningen by Ruysdael were bought at the San Donato Sale.
Ech for his vertu holden is for dere, Bothe heroner and faucon for rivere.
And, undoing his brown paper bundle, McDermott fished forth from among his change of socks and shirts and underwear the bung starter of the Hotel Faucon and laid it upon the bar for his friend's inspection.
McDermott did not see them, for some more of the Hotel Faucon had fallen on him, crushing one of his ankles and giving him a clout on the head.
The Boche went to the floor of the Hotel Faucon with a groan.
He had ordered the letters from the Hotel Faucon to be sent on there to Miss Justine, and when he had freed himself from her clasping arms he read a curt official note from the Viceroy's aid-de-camp which left him livid in a paroxysm of fury.
They were now near the plateau where the Hotel Faucon shows its semi-circular front to the splendid panorama unrolled before its windows.
Edmond, Duk of York, sonne of Edward the iij, gave the Faucon arg.
The Duk of York's bage is the Faucon and the Fetterlock.
Six days before that period, there is an entry in the church-wardens' accounts for "kervyng and peinting of the seigne of the Faucon vj sh.
The oustrich fether gold, the pen gold, and a faucon in his proper coulor and the Sonne Rising.
We went off and had a real good time at the "Faucon d'Or.
Here it is: If the authorities gave one permission, one could have rooms at the Faucon d'Or and go to the war daily.
The place in question is probably Aunou-le-Faucon (or Foulcon?
Captain Faucon was a sailor, every inch of him; he knew what a ship was, and was as much at home in one, as a cobbler in his stall.
She got under weigh with very little fuss, and came so near us as to throw a letter on board, Captain Faucon standing at the tiller himself, and steering her as he would a mackerel smack.
One day Captain Faucon went to the end of the wharf to board a vessel in the stream, and hailed for John.
Captain Faucon gave it as his opinion that Thompson was not a good navigator and that Thompson knew his sailors knew it, and to this cause he attributed in some measure Thompson's hard treatment of the men.
Stimson, a distinguished citizen of Detroit, said the account of the flogging was far from an exaggeration, and Captain Faucon of the Alert also during his lifetime frequently confirmed all that came under his observation.
She got under way with no fuss, and came so near us as to throw a letter on board, Captain Faucon standing at the tiller himself, and steering her as he would a mackerel smack.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "faucon" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.