Spenser: SelectionsClarendon Press, 1956 - 208 pages |
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Page 53
... dead , Save what in heavens storehouse he uplaid : His hope is faild , and come to passe his dread , And evill men , now dead , his deeds upbraid : Spite bites the dead , that living never baid . He now is gone , the whiles the Foxe is ...
... dead , Save what in heavens storehouse he uplaid : His hope is faild , and come to passe his dread , And evill men , now dead , his deeds upbraid : Spite bites the dead , that living never baid . He now is gone , the whiles the Foxe is ...
Page 121
... dead Dragon lay , Stretcht on the ground in monstrous large extent , The sight with idle feare did them dismay , Ne durst approch him nigh , to touch , or once assay . ix Some feard , and fled ; some feard and well it faynd ; x One that ...
... dead Dragon lay , Stretcht on the ground in monstrous large extent , The sight with idle feare did them dismay , Ne durst approch him nigh , to touch , or once assay . ix Some feard , and fled ; some feard and well it faynd ; x One that ...
Page 198
... dead , just as the dead come from the living ; and this , if true , affords a most certain proof that the souls of the dead exist in some place out of which they come again . ' ( Tr . Jowett . ) The omission by Spenser of any idea of ...
... dead , just as the dead come from the living ; and this , if true , affords a most certain proof that the souls of the dead exist in some place out of which they come again . ' ( Tr . Jowett . ) The omission by Spenser of any idea of ...
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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