The British Poets: Including Translations ...C. Whittingham, 1822 |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 21.
Pàgina 20
... song loud as they had plained , And some in other manner voice yfained , And some all out with the full throte . They proyned hem , and made hem right gay , And daunceden and lepten on the spray , And evermore two and two in fere ...
... song loud as they had plained , And some in other manner voice yfained , And some all out with the full throte . They proyned hem , and made hem right gay , And daunceden and lepten on the spray , And evermore two and two in fere ...
Pàgina 21
... songs be so elenge in good fay . " " What " ( quod she ) " what may thee aylen now , It thinketh me , I sing as well as thou , For my song is both true and plaine , And though I cannot crakell so in vaine , As thou dost in thy throte ...
... songs be so elenge in good fay . " " What " ( quod she ) " what may thee aylen now , It thinketh me , I sing as well as thou , For my song is both true and plaine , And though I cannot crakell so in vaine , As thou dost in thy throte ...
Pàgina 25
... song full hie , " I shrew all hem that been of love untrue . " And whan she had song it to the end , " Now farewell " ( quod she ) " for I mote wend , And god of love , that can right well , and may , As much joy send thee this day , As ...
... song full hie , " I shrew all hem that been of love untrue . " And whan she had song it to the end , " Now farewell " ( quod she ) " for I mote wend , And god of love , that can right well , and may , As much joy send thee this day , As ...
Pàgina 26
... song upon that tree , " Terme of life love hath withhold me , " So loud that I with that song awoke . EXPLICIT . O LEUD book with thy foule rudenesse , Sith thou 26 THE CUCKOW AND NIGHTINGALE .
... song upon that tree , " Terme of life love hath withhold me , " So loud that I with that song awoke . EXPLICIT . O LEUD book with thy foule rudenesse , Sith thou 26 THE CUCKOW AND NIGHTINGALE .
Pàgina 55
... song in honour of the king And quene of love , and than I undertake , He that is sadde , shall than full merry sing , And daungerous not ben in every thing Beseech I you , but seene my will and rede , And let your answere put me out of ...
... song in honour of the king And quene of love , and than I undertake , He that is sadde , shall than full merry sing , And daungerous not ben in every thing Beseech I you , but seene my will and rede , And let your answere put me out of ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
Æsop anon avised bird called Cange Chaucer chere colour Commaunding comp Conf corruption Cotgrave coud court Court of Love couth cuckow daunce dede dere doth drede Du Cange echone entent everichone faine faire fare fere floures French fresh gentilnesse glad gold grace grene hast hath hele Hellequin herte hond honour hote king knight lady live lord lovers lusty manere mede ment mercy mote nere neut never Orig paine Parv pity plaine pleasaunce pray prep prince pron queene quene quod rede remembraunce saint Valentines shewed sing Sith song sore sort sory statute Sterte thee thine thing thou thought trew trouth trow unto Venus Vincent of Beauvais Weive wele whan Wherefore wight wise withouten wold woll word wote Wrawe yede yeve ywis
Passatges populars
Pàgina 143 - That was right goodly and pleasuant to sight, I sie where there came singing lustily A world of ladies...
Pàgina 150 - As harpes, pipes, lutes, and sautry A He in greene; and on their heades bare Of divers floures made full craftely All in a sute goodly chapelets they ware; And so dauncing into the mede they fare. In mid the which they found a tuft that was All oversprad with floures in compas.
Pàgina 144 - But all they yede in manner of compace, But one there yede in mid the company, Sole by...
Pàgina 240 - Ladie ! th' honor of your daies eso And glorie of the world, your high thoughts scorne. 1 Hent, taken away. * L'Enooy was a sort of postscript sent with poetical compositions, and serving either to recommend them to the attention of some particular person, or to enforce what we call the moral of them. — TYRWHITT. Vouchsafe this moniment of his last praise With some few silver dropping teares t...
Pàgina 143 - Where she sat in a fresh grene laurer tree, On the further side even right by me, That gave so passing a delicious smell, According to the eglentere full well. Whereof I had so inly great pleasure, That, as me thought, I surely ravished was Into Paradise, where my desire Was for to be...
Pàgina 148 - And every knight turned his horses hede • To his fellow, and lightly laid a spere In the rest ; and so justes began On every part about here and there ; Some brake his spere, some drew down hors and...
Pàgina 150 - With great reverence, and that full humbly; And at the last there began anone A lady for to sing right womanly A bargaret in praising the daisie ; For as me thought among her notes swete, She said
Pàgina 155 - It is witnesse of their deeds mightily. " Eke there be knightes old of the garter, That in hir time did right worthily, And the honour they did to the laurer, Is for by it they have their laud wholly...
Pàgina 150 - Hond in bond a knight and a lady ; The ladies all in surcotes, that richely Purfiled were with many a rich stone, And every knight of green ware mantles on, Embrouded well so as the surcotes were, And everich had a chapelet on her hed...
Pàgina 24 - You recollect, perhaps, the dispute that follows between the cuckoo and the nightingale, and the promise which the sweet singer makes to Chaucer for rescuing her. " And then came the Nightingale to me And said Friend, forsooth I thanke thee That thou hast liked me to rescue, And one avow to Love make I now That all this May, I will thy singer be. I thanked her, and was right well apaied, Yea, quoth she, and be not thou dismaied, Tho...