The Works of Edmund Spenser, Volumen1Bell and Daldy, 1862 - 318 páginas |
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Página li
... fall be readie within tua daies ; " the meaning , when translated into English , being that James had detained master Spenser , in order that he might be the bearer of a letter to be written by the King's own hand , which should be ...
... fall be readie within tua daies ; " the meaning , when translated into English , being that James had detained master Spenser , in order that he might be the bearer of a letter to be written by the King's own hand , which should be ...
Página liv
... falls within the reach of no man living , but only to fee to the paper , and other common errors of mercenary printing . Gayn ther wilbe , no doubt , to be difpofed by you : let it be to the poorest of his fervants ; I defyre only care ...
... falls within the reach of no man living , but only to fee to the paper , and other common errors of mercenary printing . Gayn ther wilbe , no doubt , to be difpofed by you : let it be to the poorest of his fervants ; I defyre only care ...
Página lxxxvii
... falls into the fnare of a Spider . John Hey- wood , in his " Spider and Fly , " a long allegorical and didactic poem printed nearly thirty years earlier , has a covert allufion all through his work , but whether Spenser meant anything ...
... falls into the fnare of a Spider . John Hey- wood , in his " Spider and Fly , " a long allegorical and didactic poem printed nearly thirty years earlier , has a covert allufion all through his work , but whether Spenser meant anything ...
Página xcvi
... fall to ryme , I found fhort lynes to fundry Nobles pend , Whom he as fpeciall mirrours fingled fourth To be the patrons of his poetry . I read them all , and reverenc't their worth , Yet wondred he left out thy memory ; But therefore ...
... fall to ryme , I found fhort lynes to fundry Nobles pend , Whom he as fpeciall mirrours fingled fourth To be the patrons of his poetry . I read them all , and reverenc't their worth , Yet wondred he left out thy memory ; But therefore ...
Página cvi
... of Sheepheards all , Or gentle Rowland , my profeffed friend , Had they thy beautie or my pennance pend , Greater had been thy fame , and leffe my fall . " " before , viz . that the golden ball , adjudged cvi THE LIFE OF SPENSER .
... of Sheepheards all , Or gentle Rowland , my profeffed friend , Had they thy beautie or my pennance pend , Greater had been thy fame , and leffe my fall . " " before , viz . that the golden ball , adjudged cvi THE LIFE OF SPENSER .
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