Pryam ful ofte, and eek his moder dere, His bretheren and his sustren gonne him freyne Why he so sorwful was in al his chere, And what thing was the cause of al his peyne?
Thise wommen, that thus wenden hir to plese, Aboute nought gonne alle hir tales spende; Swich vanitee ne can don hir non ese, As she that, al this mene whyle.
The tyme com, fro diner for to ryse, And, as hem oughte, arisen everychoon, And gonne a while of this and that devyse.
This ilke thing they redden hem bi-twene; And largely, the mountaunce of an houre, Thei gonne on it to reden and to poure.
Soth is, that whan they gonne first to mete, So gan the peyne hir hertes for to twiste, That neither of hem other mighte grete, 1130 But hem in armes toke and after kiste.
For if a man, as this wil medled gonne him shewe, and thilke blisse in haste folowed, so lightly comminge shulde lightly cause going.
But, for to see his wo and mortal payne, The teres gonne fro myn eyen rayne Ful pitously, for very inward routhe 580 That I him saw so languisshing for trouthe.
Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys death-bedde, Alle under the wyllowe tree.
To the nyghte-mares as heie goe; Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys deathe-bedde, 870 Al under the wyllowe tree.
And as he bad, right so was doon in dede; For in a bath they gonne hir faste shetten, And night and day greet fyr they under betten.
And in her swough so sadly holdeth she 1100 Hir children two, whan she gan hem tembrace, That with greet sleighte and greet difficultee The children from hir arm they gonne arace.
The pypes of his longes gonneto swelle, And every lacerte in his brest adoun Is shent with venim and corrupcioun.
And thus with good hope and with herte blythe (1020) They take hir leve, and hom-ward gonne they ryde To Thebes, with his olde walles wyde.
It was wel withinne the night · and the moone schon, 235 Whan Gamelyn and the champioun · togider gonne goon.
Ther was the revel and the melodye; And thus lyth Alison and Nicholas, In bisinesse of mirthe and of solas, Til that the belle of laudes gan to ringe, 3655 And freres in the chauncel gonne singe.
Pampyng is endyghtyd of felony, and Edmund Broon as princypallys, and ye as axcessary, for schotyng of agonne in Awgust last past, whyche gonne kyllyd ij.
In his old age he used to sing prick-song every night (when all were gonne and sure nobody could heare him) for his health, which he did beleeve would make him live two or three yeares longer.
But what Mr. Shervill left undonne, the soldiers since have gonne through with, that there is not a piece of glass-painting left.
He had gonne thorough all the offices of the city so far as common councill man.
I would not have gonne over the threshold of the dore to have found you in a lye:' at which all the company laught at the two young gentlemen.
To the nyghte-mares as heie goe: Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys deathe-bedde, Al under the wyllowe tree.
Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys deathe-bedde, Al under the wyllowe-tree.
Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to his deathe-bedde, Al under the wyllowe-tree.
This ilke thing they redden hem bi-twene; And largely, the mountaunce of an houre, They gonne on it to reden and to poure.
And in hir swough so sadly holdith sche swoon, firmly Hir children tuo, whan sche gan hem tembrace, to embrace them That with gret sleight and gret difficulte skill The children from her arm they gonne arace.
Miss Maud Gonne played very finely," writes Mr. Yeats in recording the incident, "and her great height made Cathleen seem a divine being fallen into our mortal infirmity.
Away they gonne it for to bere, For they ne durste not answere By exposicioun ne glose 7145 To that that clerkis wole appose Ayens the cursednesse, y-wis, That in that boke writen is.
When march was complete, and also were passed, since march is gonne, or gonne by, or departed.
Go we to game be Godys grace, Myne children ben redy everych on, Every greet gonne that there was, In his mouth he hadde a ston.
He would have thengonne to the king of France (Lewis XIII), but his owne men brought him back.
But gonne she is, the prettiest[507] lasse That ever trod on plaine.
Thoo com the sexte companye, And gonne faste on Fame crye.
I find Maud Gonne at her hotel talking to a young working-man who looks very melancholy.
I had in my head a project to reconcile old and new that gave Maud Gonne and myself many stirring conversations upon journeys by rail to meetings in Scotland, in Dublin, or in the Midlands.
Maud Gonne tells how that morning she had gone to lay a wreath upon a martyr's tomb at St. Michael's Church, for it is the one day in the year when such wreaths are laid, but has been refused admission because it is the Jubilee.
Maud Gonne has a look of exultation as she walks with her laughing head thrown back.
The meeting is held in College Green and is very crowded, and Maud Gonne speaks, I think, standing upon a chair.
Maud Gonne had the same friends that I had, and the Dublin committee could not be made to understand that whatever money she collected would go to the movement, and not to her friends and their opponents.
I tried to persuade Maud Gonne to be that hostess, but her social life was in Paris, and she had already formed a new ambition, the turning of French public opinion against England.
Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys deathe-bedde, Alle under the wyllowe tree.
To the nyghte-mares as heie goe; Mie love ys dedde, Gonne to hys deathe-bedde, Al under the wyllowe tree.
So it came about that the Maud Gonne Club became slowly transformed into a real union.
Let us have a club, and we'll call it the Maud Gonne Club.
Addressing the Irish National Literary Society, of Loughrea, Miss Gonne said that she must "contradict Lord Wolseley in his statement that England was never insulted by invasion since the days of William the Conqueror.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "gonne" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.