The Works of Edmund Spenser: The life of Edmund SpenserJohns Hopkins Press, 1947 |
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Page 67
... Naturally the patronage of so great and rich a man was prized . Spenser calls himself " his Colin " and speaks of ... natural return to his own country , yet too early a departure " for all that did his loue embrace , " and the second ...
... Naturally the patronage of so great and rich a man was prized . Spenser calls himself " his Colin " and speaks of ... natural return to his own country , yet too early a departure " for all that did his loue embrace , " and the second ...
Page 101
... naturally grew worse , so that by the following spring " griesly famine " was stalking everywhere . " 60 A traditional privilege of the deputy was to reward his associates in the Irish government by favors in the form of leases and ...
... naturally grew worse , so that by the following spring " griesly famine " was stalking everywhere . " 60 A traditional privilege of the deputy was to reward his associates in the Irish government by favors in the form of leases and ...
Page 211
... natural to those living in a half - conquered land , induced at times a mood of melancholy , the total impression ... naturally the chron- icles of England , but also the old Irish culture all about him . The past , thanks to his ...
... natural to those living in a half - conquered land , induced at times a mood of melancholy , the total impression ... naturally the chron- icles of England , but also the old Irish culture all about him . The past , thanks to his ...
Contents
Merry London | 10 |
The Schoolboy | 11 |
Van der Noots Theatre | 20 |
Copyright | |
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