Banneret or bachelor, square pennon or forked, I would not give a denier for the difference, and the less since Sir John Chandos, chosen flower of English chivalry, is himself but a humble knight.

"Happy painter, Jehan Fourbault!" said Gringoire with a deep sigh; and he turned his back upon the bannerets and pennons. It was, since he could not escape from the Pope of the Fools, from Jehan Fourbault's bannerets , from May trusses, from squibs and crackers, to go to the Place de Grève.

A final enigma remains with this odd poem: the banneret in the final stanza, or rather what is imprinted on the banneret 's banner.

Thrupp sees the knights, esquires, and "gentils" as "an extension of the baronage, which was directly rooted in the land system of the age [and g]entility was associated with the four military ranks of knight, banneret , esquire, and man-at-armes,..." (237, 239).

* Fountains: The city boasts of several fountains--among them are the Justice Fountain, Banneret Fountain, Griffon Fountain

But Fortune did get off the mark when producing 106-1 shot Magic Dream to beat Holland on Banneret by half a length in a seven-furlong handicap.

The illuminated initial shows Gautier de Dargies, a knight banneret whose family domain lay near Beauvais, and like all the portraits of trouvere knights in the chansonniers this one is a vivid emblem of French expansionism in the 13th century.(5) Gautier rides a war-horse, a destrier, that has broken into a gallop; fully armed, he raises his sword to strike.

The lines beginning the second part of the first movement recreate the mindless antics of privileged Viennese, the mechanical harmony of marching men, the fluttering of banneret and the racing pulses, heads filled with notions of 'glory'.

Justice Fountain, Banneret Fountain, Griffon Fountain stand in different places of the old town.

Tom McLaughlin earned his fee as he drove the lazy Banneret to victory over Appyabo in the claimer.