Fourth booke of the Faerie Queene, canto I-XIIF. C. & J. Rivington, 1805 |
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Страница 5
... hight ; Unfitly yokt together in one teeme . That is the caufe why never any Knight Is fuffred here to enter , but he seeme Such as no doubt of him he need mifdeeme . " Thereat Sir Satyrane gan fmyle , and fay ; Extremely mad the man I ...
... hight ; Unfitly yokt together in one teeme . That is the caufe why never any Knight Is fuffred here to enter , but he seeme Such as no doubt of him he need mifdeeme . " Thereat Sir Satyrane gan fmyle , and fay ; Extremely mad the man I ...
Страница 24
... that it might probably be owing to fome blotted copy that Xanthus in the last verse in this ftanza is printed inftead of Simois . UPTON , Whiles yet on Ida he a fhepeheard hight , On 24 BOOK III . THE FAERIE QUEENE .
... that it might probably be owing to fome blotted copy that Xanthus in the last verse in this ftanza is printed inftead of Simois . UPTON , Whiles yet on Ida he a fhepeheard hight , On 24 BOOK III . THE FAERIE QUEENE .
Страница 25
... Hight Naufa ; there he many yeares did raine , And built Nauficle by the Pontick shore ; The which he dying lefte next in remaine To Paridas his fonne , From whom I Paridell by kin defcend : But , for faire ladies love and glories gaine ...
... Hight Naufa ; there he many yeares did raine , And built Nauficle by the Pontick shore ; The which he dying lefte next in remaine To Paridas his fonne , From whom I Paridell by kin defcend : But , for faire ladies love and glories gaine ...
Страница 30
... hight , that with the waves Of wealthy Thamis washed is along , Upon whose stubborne neck ( whereat he raves With roring rage , and fore himfelfe does throng , That all men feare to tempt his billowes ftrong , ) She fastned hath her ...
... hight , that with the waves Of wealthy Thamis washed is along , Upon whose stubborne neck ( whereat he raves With roring rage , and fore himfelfe does throng , That all men feare to tempt his billowes ftrong , ) She fastned hath her ...
Страница 31
... hight , And far abroad his mighty braunches threw Into the utmost angle of the world he knew , XLVIII . " For that fame Brute , whom much he did ad- vaunce In all his fpeach , was Sylvius his fonne , XLVII . 4. From aged Mnemon ...
... hight , And far abroad his mighty braunches threw Into the utmost angle of the world he knew , XLVIII . " For that fame Brute , whom much he did ad- vaunce In all his fpeach , was Sylvius his fonne , XLVII . 4. From aged Mnemon ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
againſt alfo Amoret Blandamour Britomart Canto Chaucer CHURCH cloſe cruell Dame deare defire doth dreadfull edition in 1758 edition reads eftfoones expreffion F. Q. iii Faerie Queene faft faid faire faire Ladies falfe fame farre fayd feare fecond fecret feeke feem'd feems feene fhew fide fight filk firft firſt flaine Florimell folios fome foone fore forrow freſh ftill fuch fure goodly hart hath herfelfe hight himſelfe Hughes JORTIN Knight Ladies laft laſt leffe likewife Malbecco moft moſt mote nought obferved Ovid paffage paffed Paridell pleaſure poet powre reft reſt Satyrane Scudamour ſhe ſhould Spenfer Spenfer's own edition Squire ſtay ſtill ſtrong thefe themſelves thence theſe third folios thofe thoſe thou thouſand TODD Tonfon's edition Triamond ufed unto UPTON uſed vaine Venus viii Virgil WARTON weene weet whenas whofe whoſe wight XXXII
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Страница 448 - Ouse came far from land, By many a city and by many a towne And many rivers taking under-hand Into his waters as he passeth downe, The Cle, the Were, the Grant, the Sture, the Rowne. Thence doth by Huntingdon and Cambridge flit, My mother Cambridge, whom as with a Crowne He doth adorne, and is adorn'd of it With many a gentle Muse and many a learned wit.
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Страница 402 - Thus having past all perill, I was come Within the compasse of that Islands space ; The which did seeme, unto my simple doome, The onely pleasant and delightfull place That ever troden was of footings trace : For all that nature by her mother-wit Could frame in earth, and forme of substance base, Was there ; and all that nature did omit, Art, playing second natures part, supplyed it.
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Страница 419 - They all doe learne to play the Paramours; First doe the merry birds, thy prety pages Privily pricked with thy lustfull powres, Chirpe loud to thee out of their leavy cages, And thee their mother call to coole their kindly rages.
Страница 136 - For it of honor and all vertue is The roote, and brings forth glorious flowres of fame, That crowne true lovers with immortall blis, The meed of them that love, and do not live amisse.
Страница 394 - Although the Roman or Grecian architecture did not begin to prevail in England till the time of Inigo Jones; yet our communication with the Italians, and our imitation of their manners, produced fome fpecimens of that ftylc much earlier.
Страница 153 - And loathly mouth, unmeete a mouth to bee, That nought but gall and venim comprehended, And wicked wordes that God and man offended. Her lying tongue was in two parts divided, And both the parts did speake, and both contended ; And as her tongue so was her hart discided, That never thoght one thing, but doubly stil was guided.