The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper;: Gower, Skelton, Howard, Wyat, Gascoigne, TurbervileSamuel Johnson J. Johnson; J. Nichols and son; R. Baldwin; F. and C. Rivington; W. Otridge and Son; Leigh and Sotheby; R. Faulder and Son; G. Nicol and Son; T. Payne; G. Robinson; Wilkie and Robinson; C. Davies; T. Egerton; Scatcherd and Letterman; J. Walker; Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe; R. Lea; J. Nunn; Lackington, Allen, and Company; J. Stockdale; Cuthell and Martin; Clarke and Sons; J. White and Company; Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme; Cadell and Davies; J. Barker; John Richardson; J.M. Richardson; J. Carpenter; B. Crosby; E. Jeffery; J. Murray; W. Miller; J. and A. Arch; Black, Parry, and Kingsbury; J. Booker; S. Bagster; J. Harding; J. Mackinlay; J. Hatchard; R.H. Evans; Matthews and Leigh; J. Mawman; J. Booth; J. Asperne; P. and W. Wynne; and W. Grace, Deighton and Son at Cambridge; and Wilson and Son at York, 1810 |
Fra bogen
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Side xi
... Pride Piero to Turbervile ........ ib . The Lover to Cupid for Mercie ib . ib . After Misadventures , come good Haps . ****** ... 609 Verse in Prayse of Lord Henrie Howarde , Erle of Surrey ...... 588 To his Love , that controlde his ...
... Pride Piero to Turbervile ........ ib . The Lover to Cupid for Mercie ib . ib . After Misadventures , come good Haps . ****** ... 609 Verse in Prayse of Lord Henrie Howarde , Erle of Surrey ...... 588 To his Love , that controlde his ...
Side xii
... Pride ib . Of an open Foe and a fayned Friend ......... 640 Of the Clock and the Cock 625 Again ib . Of a Tayler ........ ib . Of a rich Miser ib . ........ The Lover finding his Love flitted from , wonted troth Leaves to write in ...
... Pride ib . Of an open Foe and a fayned Friend ......... 640 Of the Clock and the Cock 625 Again ib . Of a Tayler ........ ib . Of a rich Miser ib . ........ The Lover finding his Love flitted from , wonted troth Leaves to write in ...
Side 9
... pride was a vice holde . Of holy churche the largesse , Yafe then and did great almesse To poure men , that had neede . Thei were eke chast in word and deede , Wherof the people ensample toke , Their lust was all upon the boke , Or for ...
... pride was a vice holde . Of holy churche the largesse , Yafe then and did great almesse To poure men , that had neede . Thei were eke chast in word and deede , Wherof the people ensample toke , Their lust was all upon the boke , Or for ...
Side 10
... pride , And holy churche goth beside : Whiche sheweth outwarde a visage Of that is nought in the courage . For if men loke in holy churche Betwene the worde , and that thei worche , There is a full great difference . Thei prechen vs in ...
... pride , And holy churche goth beside : Whiche sheweth outwarde a visage Of that is nought in the courage . For if men loke in holy churche Betwene the worde , and that thei worche , There is a full great difference . Thei prechen vs in ...
Side 26
... pride : And next vpon that other side To shriue and speake ouer this Touchande of pride yet there is The pointe seconde I the behote , Whiche Inobedience is hote . Flectere quam frangi melius reputatur , & ollæ Fictilis ad cacabum pugna ...
... pride : And next vpon that other side To shriue and speake ouer this Touchande of pride yet there is The pointe seconde I the behote , Whiche Inobedience is hote . Flectere quam frangi melius reputatur , & ollæ Fictilis ad cacabum pugna ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
aboue ageyne anone awey ayene beleue bokes chere cleped Confessor counseile couth cronike daie dede doth doughter drede ensample enuie euer euery exemplum fader fals father fonde full ofte fynde goddes goth grace grekes hast hath haue hede herde herte heuen hight honde hote hym selfe kepe kynde kynge lady laie leue liche liue loke londe lorde loue lust lustie maie maketh maner mede mote myn herte netheles neuer night nothyng nought ouer pitee praide qualiter quene quod rede saie saith saue sayd serue sette seyne shulde sigh slepe slouth sondrie sonne sorowe speche spede speke stant stede stode stonde tale therfore therto thervpon thilke thou shalt thought thyn thynge tofore toke tolde Touchende Troie trouth tyme Unto vertue vnder vnderstonde vnto vpon whan Wherof whilom wise wist witte wolde woll wordes worlde wote yeue yonge
Populære passager
Side 411 - As there had been none such. My Muse doth not delight Me as she did before; My hand and pen are not in plight, As they have been of yore. For reason me denies This youthly idle rhyme; And day by day to me she cries, "Leave off these toys in time.
Side 315 - ... exhibited in Vertue's valuable plate of the Arundel family, and was actually in the possession of the late Duke of Norfolk.
Side 323 - And, in my mind, I measure pace by pace To seek the place, where I myself had lost, That day that I was tangled in the lace, In seeming slack, that knitteth ever most.
Side 351 - Her sister Anne, spritelesse for dread to heare This fearefull sturre, with nailes gan teare her face. She smote her brest, and rushed through the rout, And her dieng she cleapes thus by her name : "Sister, for this with craft did you me bourd? '°° The stak, the flame, the altars, bred they this?
Side 447 - While this négociation was mediating, a circumstance occurred which had nearly cost him his life. A lady at the Hague (then in the possession of the enemy) with whom Gascoigne had been on intimate terms, had his portrait in her hands, and resolving to part with it to himself alone wrote a letter to him...
Side 481 - I can no more delays devise; But welcome pain, let pleasure pass. With lullaby now take your leave; With lullaby your dreams deceive; And when you rise with waking eye, Remember then this lullaby.
Side 445 - Many of his epistles dedicatory are dated in 1575, 1576, from "his poore house in Walthamstoe:" where he died, a middle-aged man, in 1578, according to Anth. Wood: or rather in 1577, if he is the person meant in an old tract, entitled, "A remembrance of the well-employed life and godly end of George Gascoigne, Esq., who deceased at Stamford in Lincolnshire, Oct. 7, 1577, by Geo. Whetstone, Gent., an eye-witness of his godly and charitable end in this world,
Side xv - Instead of boldly cloathing these qualities with corporeal attributes, aptly and poetically imagined, he coldly yet sensibly describes their operations, and enumerates their properties. What Gower wanted in invention, he supplied from his common-place book; which appears to have been stored with an inexhaustible fund of instructive maxims, pleasant narrations, and philosophical definitions.
Side 453 - ... consider the general merit of the poets in the early part of the Elizabethan period, it will probably appear that the extreme rarity of Gascoigne's works has been the chief cause of his being so much neglected by modern readers. In smoothness and harmony of versification, he yields to no poet of his own time, when these qualities were very common ; but his higher merit is, that in every thing he discovers the powers and invention of a poet ; a warmth of sentiment, tender and natural ; and a fertility...
Side 325 - Love that liveth and reigneth in my thought, That built his seat within my captive breast, Clad in the arms wherein with me he fought, Oft in my face he doth his banner rest.