Remains of the Early Popular Poetry of England, Zväzok 2William Carew Hazlitt J.R. Smith, 1866 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 16.
Strana xi
... things , in short or long metre , for the purpose of being sung to the harp . At the period when Puttenham flourished the old professional bards were disappearing fast , and gentlemen , it seems , were to some extent becoming their own ...
... things , in short or long metre , for the purpose of being sung to the harp . At the period when Puttenham flourished the old professional bards were disappearing fast , and gentlemen , it seems , were to some extent becoming their own ...
Strana xiii
... thing , and that he had no clue whatever to its whereabouts ( being probably preserved in some drawer or portfolio ) . His Grace was kind enough to say that a general search should have been undertaken at Devonshire House , upon his ...
... thing , and that he had no clue whatever to its whereabouts ( being probably preserved in some drawer or portfolio ) . His Grace was kind enough to say that a general search should have been undertaken at Devonshire House , upon his ...
Strana 109
... thing that shalbe honorable , and to the body healthfull and profitable : I now most humble manere beseech your most noble highnes two gentlemen , assosyatying to them two other gentlemen to be their aides , to give vs your gratious ...
... thing that shalbe honorable , and to the body healthfull and profitable : I now most humble manere beseech your most noble highnes two gentlemen , assosyatying to them two other gentlemen to be their aides , to give vs your gratious ...
Strana 160
... phrase , which is by no means uncommon in early English poetry . Gower : - " And thus what thing unto his pay Was most plesant , he lefte none . " So Confessio Amantis , lib . vi . But , good lord , speke som mery word , 160 ADAM BEL , ETC.
... phrase , which is by no means uncommon in early English poetry . Gower : - " And thus what thing unto his pay Was most plesant , he lefte none . " So Confessio Amantis , lib . vi . But , good lord , speke som mery word , 160 ADAM BEL , ETC.
Strana 167
... things lye dead . " The edition of 1630 , however , now reprinted , is the earliest at present known to exist ; and even of it the copy bequeathed by the author of the Anatomy of Melancholy to the Bodleian Library is supposed to be ...
... things lye dead . " The edition of 1630 , however , now reprinted , is the earliest at present known to exist ; and even of it the copy bequeathed by the author of the Anatomy of Melancholy to the Bodleian Library is supposed to be ...
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Remains of the Early Popular Poetry of England, Zväzok 2 William Carew Hazlitt Úplné zobrazenie - 1866 |
Remains of the Early Popular Poetry of England, Zväzok 2 William Carew Hazlitt Úplné zobrazenie - 1866 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
abyde Adam Bel agayne anone batayle brynge chalenge chambre CHIG Clough Collier's Copland's court curtesy daye defendauntes dere doughter Duke dyde eche edition euery Fairy fast fayre felde ffor fyrst fysche gaue golde grace graunt grene grete hath haue herte horse King Arthur knight kynge lady leue loked London Lord Phenix loue lyfe Maye mery mone moost myght neuer noble Orig ouer poem praye printed Queen redy Ritson Robin Hood rode RSITY UNIV ryde ryght saue sayd seruauntes seuen yere shal shalbe shewe sholde SITY sone souerayne speres squyer stewarde stode syde syth thee ther Therfore theyr thre Thumb toke Tom Thumb Tommy Pots twayne tyde Tyll tyme UNIV UNIV unto vnto vpon vsen wende whan wolde woodcut word wyfe wyll Wynkyn de Worde wyse wyst wyth yemen yf ye yonge
Populárne pasáže
Strana 145 - I HAD a little husband No bigger than my thumb; I put him in a pint pot, And there I bade him drum. . I bought a little horse, That galloped up and down; I bridled him and saddled him, And sent him out of town.
Strana 144 - gan somewhat cease Proserpina commandeth peace ; And that a while they should release Each other of their peril; "Which here...
Strana 116 - He toke hys sweard and hys buckler, And among them all he ran; Where the people were most in prece, He smot downe many
Strana 142 - Goe you together, For you can change your shapes Like to the weather. Sib and Tib, Licke and Lull, You all have trickes, too : Little Tom Thumb that pipes Shall goe betwixt you.
Strana 26 - Who is this ? noble Hector of Troy? " sayth the thirde ; " No, but of the same nest," say I, " it is a birde ; " " Who is this? greate Goliah, Sampson, or Colbrande?" " No," say I, " but it is a brute of the Alie Lande ; " "Who is this? greate Alexander? or Charle le Maigne?" 125 " No, it is the tenth Worthie,
Strana 160 - Thumbe did bravely make. Gainst whom these noble knights did run, Sir Chinon, and the rest, Yet still Tom Thumbe with matchles might Did beare away the best. At last...
Strana 242 - I'le see this wedding," Lord Arundel said, " Of my daughters luck that is so fair ; Seeing the matter will be no better, Of all my lands Tom Pots shall be the heir.
Strana 225 - Or all the lords in Scotland fair, And ladies that been so bright of blee, There is a noble lady among them all, And report of her you shall hear by me. For of her beauty she is bright, And of her colour very fair, She's daughter to lord Arundel, Approv'd his parand and his heir. He see this bride, lord Phenix said, That lady of so bright a blee, And if I like her countenance well, The heir of all my lands she'st be.
Strana 116 - Sorrow with a song, He say[s] these jestes can get no grotes, & al this geare goth wrong : Fyrst pride without cause why, he singes the treble parte, The meane hee mumbles out of tune, for lacke of life and hart : Cost lost, the counter Tenor chanteth on apace, Thus...
Strana 228 - And there Tom Pots came he to see. He gave him the letter in his hand, Before that he began to read, He told him plainly by word of mouth, His love was forc'd to be lord Phenix bride.