The complete works in verse and prose of Edmund Spenser. Ed. with a new life and a glossary, by A.B. Grosart, Том 71882 |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 6 - 10 от 51.
Страница 72
... mote rife , And turne both him and her to honour in this wife . One day , when all that troupe of warlike wooers Affembled were , to weet whofe fhe fhould bee , 340 All mightie men and dreadfull derring dooers , ( The harder it to make ...
... mote rife , And turne both him and her to honour in this wife . One day , when all that troupe of warlike wooers Affembled were , to weet whofe fhe fhould bee , 340 All mightie men and dreadfull derring dooers , ( The harder it to make ...
Страница 75
... mote be abridged through their corage ftout . Therefore defirous th'end of all their dayes To know , and them t'enlarge with long extent , By wondrous fkill , and many hidden wayes , To the three fatall fifters house she went . Farre ...
... mote be abridged through their corage ftout . Therefore defirous th'end of all their dayes To know , and them t'enlarge with long extent , By wondrous fkill , and many hidden wayes , To the three fatall fifters house she went . Farre ...
Страница 81
... mote stay the steele , till in his fide The mortall point moft cruelly empight : / Where fast infixed , whileft he fought by flight It forth to wreft , the staffe a funder brake , And left the head behind : with which defpight He all ...
... mote stay the steele , till in his fide The mortall point moft cruelly empight : / Where fast infixed , whileft he fought by flight It forth to wreft , the staffe a funder brake , And left the head behind : with which defpight He all ...
Страница 85
... mote ye wonder how that noble Knight , After he had fo often wounded beene , 200 Could stand on foot , now to renew the fight . But had ye then him forth aduauncing seene , Some newborne wight ye would him surely weene : So fresh he ...
... mote ye wonder how that noble Knight , After he had fo often wounded beene , 200 Could stand on foot , now to renew the fight . But had ye then him forth aduauncing seene , Some newborne wight ye would him surely weene : So fresh he ...
Страница 96
... which was blazed brode , For that rich girdle of faire Florimell , The prize of her , which did in beautie moft excell . 1. 35 ,; for , -accepted . To which folke - mote they all with one confent 96 THE IIII . BOOKE OF THE [ Cant . IIII .
... which was blazed brode , For that rich girdle of faire Florimell , The prize of her , which did in beautie moft excell . 1. 35 ,; for , -accepted . To which folke - mote they all with one confent 96 THE IIII . BOOKE OF THE [ Cant . IIII .
Често срещани думи и фрази
aduentures againſt Amoret Artegall battell beheld beſt Blandamour bloud Britomart Cambell cauſe cloſe cruell Dame daunger deare defpight doth dreadfull eftfoones euen euer euermore euery euill faire faire Ladies falfe fame farre fayd feare fecret feeke feem'd feeme felfe fell fhall fhew fhield fide fight firſt flaine fleepe Florimell fome foone for,-accepted fore forrow freſh ftill ftreight ftrife ftrokes ftrong fuch fure gentle Glauce goodly grone hand hart hath haue hauing heauen hight himſelfe knight Ladies laft laſt leffe liues liuing loue louely louers mayd mighty moft moſt mote neuer nigh nought ouer Paridell powre reft reſt ſaw Scudamour ſeeing ſeemed ſhe ſhould ſpeare Squire ſtill Talus thee themfelues thence thereof theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand Triamond vaine vertue vnder vnto vpon vppon warlike weene weet Whileft whofe Whoſe wight wize wonne wont wyde yeeld yron
Популярни откъси
Страница 229 - And also those which wonne in th' azure sky : For much more eath to tell the starres on hy, Albe they endlesse seeme in estimation, Then to recount the Seas posterity : So fertile be the flouds in generation, So huge their numbers, and so numberlesse their nation. Therefore the antique wisards well invented That Venus of the fomy sea was bred, For that the seas by her are most augmented : Witnesse th' exceeding fry which there are fed, And wondrous sholes which may of none be red.
Страница 122 - Right fit to rend the food on which he fared. His name was Care ; a blacksmith by his trade, That neither day nor night from working spared, But to small purpose yron wedges made ; Those be unquiet...
Страница 268 - Doe flourish now, they into dust shall vade. What wrong then is it, if that when they die They turne to that whereof they first were made ? All in the powre of their great Maker lie : All creatures must obey the voice of the Most Hie.
Страница 206 - The raging seas, and makst the stormes to flie ; Thee, goddesse, thee the winds, the clouds doe feare, And, when thou spredst thy mantle forth on hie, The waters play, and...
Страница 307 - At sight thereof his cruell minded hart Empierced was with pittifull regard, That his sharpe sword he threw from him apart, Cursing his hand that had that visage mard: No hand so cruell, nor no hart so hard, But ruth of beautie will it mollifie.
Страница 344 - And practicke use in armes ; ne spared not Their dainty parts, which nature had created So faire and tender without staine or spot For other uses then they them translated; Which they now hackt and hewd as if such use they hated.
Страница 268 - He gives to this, from that He takes away : For all we have is His : what He list doe, He may.
Страница 348 - So there a while they afterwards remained, Him to refresh, and her late wounds to heale: During which space she there as Princess rained, And changing all that forme of common weale, The liberty of women did repeale, Which they had long vsurpt; and them restoring To mens subiection, did true lustice deale: That all they as a Goddesse her adoring, Her wisedome did admire, and hearkned to her loring.
Страница 207 - So all the world by thee at first was made, And dayly yet thou doest the same repayre ; Ne ought on earth that merry is and glad, Ne ought on earth that lovely is and fayre, But thou the same for pleasure didst prepayre : Thou art the root of all that joyous is : Great God of men and women, queene of th...
Страница 242 - For that which all men then did vertue call, Is now cald vice ; and that which vice was hight, Is now hight vertue, and so us'd of all : Right now is wrong, and wrong that was is right...