| Edmund Spenser - 1892 - 304 pages
...jealous opinions and misconstructions, as also for your better light in reading thereof, (being so by you commanded) to discover unto you the general! intention...without expressing of any particular purposes, or by-accidents therein occasioned. The generall end therefore of all the booke, is to fashion a gentleman... | |
| Anna Swanwick - Poetry - 1892 - 412 pages
...Ealeigh, wherein he expounds the intention and meaning of his poem, he tells us that "the general end of all the booke is to fashion a gentleman or noble person." As the framework of his poem he chose the history of King Arthur, " in whom he laboured to pourtray,... | |
| Edmund Spenser - Epic poetry, English - 1893 - 426 pages
...gealous opinions and misconstructions, as also for your better light in reading thereof, (being so by you commanded,) to discover unto you the general intention...purposes, or by accidents, therein occasioned. The general! end therefore of all the booke is to fashion a gentleman or noble person in vertuous and gentle... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1893 - 998 pages
...lforavoydingofgealous opinions and misconstructions, as also for your better light in readhig thereof, (being so by you commanded.) to discover unto you the general intention...the whole course thereof I have fashioned, without caressing of any particular purposes, or by accidents, therein occasioned. The generall end therefore... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - Literary Collections - 1893 - 632 pages
...an edifying story, carrying out in its own way the same design as Spenser's in the Faerie Queene — "to fashion a gentleman or noble person in vertuous and gentle discipline." This was the end of all poetry according to the doctrine of those days ; a doctrine that might easily... | |
| Charles Eliot Norton, George Henry Browne - 1895 - 396 pages
...and misconstructions, as also for your better light in reading thereof (being so by your command), to discover unto you the general intention and meaning,...which in the whole course thereof I have fashioned. . . . The generall end therefore of all the booke is to fashion a gentleman or noble person in vertuous... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1896 - 312 pages
...your better light in reading thereof, (being so, by you commanded) to discover unto you the generall intention and meaning, which in the whole course thereof...without expressing of any particular purposes, or by-accidents therein occasioned. The generall end therefore of all the booke, is to fashion a gentleman... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1896 - 312 pages
...your better light in reading thereof, (being so, by you commanded) to discover unto you the generall intention and meaning, which in the whole course thereof...without expressing of any particular purposes, or by-accidents therein occasioned. The generall end therefore of all the booke, is to fashion a gentleman... | |
| William John Courthope - English poetry - 1897 - 478 pages
...jealous opinions and misconstructions, as also for your better light in reading thereof (being so by you commanded) to discover unto you the general intention...without expressing of any particular purposes, or by-accidents, therein occasioned. The general end therefore of all the book is to fashion a gentleman... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1897 - 808 pages
...and misconstructions* as also for your better light m reading thereof, (being so by you rnmtnanded.) y, they by your secret powie are made: But. what we see not, J have fashioned, without exjjressing of any particular purposes, or by accidents, therein occasioned.... | |
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