Spenser: SelectionsClarendon Press, 1956 - 208 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 17
Page 75
... answer and your eccho ring . Wake , now my love , awake ; for it is time , The Rosy Morne long since left Tithones bed , All ready to her silver coche to clyme , And Phoebus gins to shew his glorious hed . Hark how the cheerefull birds ...
... answer and your eccho ring . Wake , now my love , awake ; for it is time , The Rosy Morne long since left Tithones bed , All ready to her silver coche to clyme , And Phoebus gins to shew his glorious hed . Hark how the cheerefull birds ...
Page 76
... answer and your eccho ring . Now is my love all ready forth to come , Let all the virgins therefore well awayt , And ye fresh boyes that tend upon her groome Prepare your selves ; for he is comming strayt . Set all your things in ...
... answer and your eccho ring . Now is my love all ready forth to come , Let all the virgins therefore well awayt , And ye fresh boyes that tend upon her groome Prepare your selves ; for he is comming strayt . Set all your things in ...
Page 77
... answer and theyr eccho ring . Loe where she comes along with portly pace Lyke Phoebe from her chamber of the East , Arysing forth to run her mighty race , Clad all in white , that seemes a virgin best . So well it her beseemes that ye ...
... answer and theyr eccho ring . Loe where she comes along with portly pace Lyke Phoebe from her chamber of the East , Arysing forth to run her mighty race , Clad all in white , that seemes a virgin best . So well it her beseemes that ye ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aeneid allegory alwayes Ariosto Artegall beauty behold bloud Book bowre brest Britomart Canto Chaucer Colin cruell Cuddie daunce deare death delight dight doest doth dread dreadfull eccho ring Epithalamion excellent eyes Faerie Queene faire farre fayre feare flowres Gabriel Harvey gentle Goddesse goodly grace hand hart hath heaven heavenly Hesiod hight Hobbinoll honour immortall indeede knight Lady layd light living lovely band lyke Mantuan mote Muses Musick mynd nigh noble nought numbers Nymphes Ovid Petrarch pipe Plato poem poetry Poets powre prayse Prince Richard Barnfield rymes sayd Scudamour seemd seeme seemeth selfe shame Shepheardes Calender shew shyning sight sing sith song sore soule soveraine Spenser spide spright stanza sweet thee Theocritus thereof theyr things thou thought unto verse vertue Virgil weene whome whyche wont woods worthy wyde yron ΙΟ