None knew, though poets and jongleurs speculated in endless romantic ballads and epics.
2
We might play that we were jongleurs, and that it was still mediaeval times.
3
Minstrels and jongleurs draw custom and so claim to pay no score, except for liquor.
4
With music, and stories, jongleurs and troubadours-She laughed, exultant, as if it were already happening.
5
We will go as jongleurs, then.
6
This was composed by the troubadours (corresponding to the French trouveres) and sung by jongleurs or minstrels.
7
Like those troubadours who had become jongleurs, they lived upon the crumbs which fell from the table of princes.
8
They themselves attributed their decline to the degradation into which the jongleurs, with whom at last they were confounded, had fallen.
9
I got into doing a lot of work with comedians, which I really enjoyed, and became a show manager for jongleurs comedy.
10
As he listened to the songs of the troubadours and jongleurs Raimon became convinced that what he felt for Desire was love.
11
Charlevoix and the other early Jesuit missionaries found that the jongleurs, as Charlevoix calls the Jossakeeds or medicine-men, were their chief opponents.
12
Every distinguished poet employed salaried musicians, the joglars (jongleurs), who wandered from court to court, singing their masters' new songs.
13
The grim reality on the street was proving far removed from the jongleurs' and troubadours' tales of roguish grinning thieves with hearts of gold.
14
And the gold and silver go there, and the ermines and sables; and there go the harpers and jongleurs, and the kings of the world.
15
He is alternately the oppressor and the victim of heroic and self-willed nobles-theidealized types of the patrons for whom the jongleurs and troubadours sang.
16
After the murders, nobody's in the mood around here to see Jongleurs.