Battel, or Battels, is a term still used at the University of Oxford to refer to the food ordered by members of the college as distinct from the usual "commons". Hence it also referred to college accounts for board and provisions supplied from kitchen and buttery, and, generally, the whole of a person's college accounts. Though the distinction from commons is no longer relevant, the term persists as the name for members' termly bills at many colleges at the Universities of Oxford and Durham.
Batteler, later a resident in a college, was originally a rank of students between Commoner (academia)s and servitors who, as the name implies, were not supplied with "commons", but only such provisions as they ordered for themselves.
The inventory of Henry Thorlthorpe, a Vicar Choral of the church of Saint Peter in York — the Minster — who died in 1426, includes in the debts he has to pay battels of this sort. When he died in 1426 his probate inventory, in the Borthwick Institute of Historical Records at the University of York as translated by Philip Stell in Probate Inventories of the York Diocese (AY2/3, ISBN 1-874454-37-X), says "for batells that Henry owes to the community of parsons 2 pence".
She's gone on a winters breath
If you find her, then keep whats left
She don't feel like no Love of mine
and the storm don't care what it leaves behind
and Ill miss you, but you must move on
The sun won't shine where you don't belong
(Chorus)
Love is all that we keep
In the box that you're burnt when you lay down to sleep
(x2)
Love of mine, may you find your way
for I lost my love on a winters day
and I don't blame you, its what I love you for
you were born to breeze through an open door
Love of mine, remember me
like a breaking wave, on your broken sea
(Chorus)
Love is all that we keep
In the box that you're burnt when you lay down to sleep
(x2)
(Break)
(Chorus)
Love is all that we keep
In the box that you're burnt when you lay down to sleep