Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the Middle Ages, 18 tomasPercy Society, 1846 |
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28 psl.
... werke trewe , Without whiche fyve there can be no sentence . For these fyve do well evermore renue The matter parfyte with good intellygence . Who that will se them with all his dyligence , Here foloweng I shall them specify , Accordyng ...
... werke trewe , Without whiche fyve there can be no sentence . For these fyve do well evermore renue The matter parfyte with good intellygence . Who that will se them with all his dyligence , Here foloweng I shall them specify , Accordyng ...
29 psl.
... werke Of v . inward wittes with hole affeccion , As writeth right many a noble clerke , Wyth mysty colour of cloudes derke , How comyn wytte doothe full well electe What it shoulde take , and what it shall abjecte . And secondly , by ...
... werke Of v . inward wittes with hole affeccion , As writeth right many a noble clerke , Wyth mysty colour of cloudes derke , How comyn wytte doothe full well electe What it shoulde take , and what it shall abjecte . And secondly , by ...
31 psl.
... werke upon them all , By cours ingenious to rynne dyrectly After theyr thoughtes , than in generall The mynde must cause them to be memoriall ; As after this shall appere more openly , All hole exprest by dame Phylosophy . O thrust of ...
... werke upon them all , By cours ingenious to rynne dyrectly After theyr thoughtes , than in generall The mynde must cause them to be memoriall ; As after this shall appere more openly , All hole exprest by dame Phylosophy . O thrust of ...
36 psl.
... werke . Thus have they made many a noble clerke . To dysnull myschefe and inconvenyence , They made our lawes wyth grete diligence . Before the lawe , in a tumblyng barge The people sayled , wythout parfitnes , Throughe the worlde all ...
... werke . Thus have they made many a noble clerke . To dysnull myschefe and inconvenyence , They made our lawes wyth grete diligence . Before the lawe , in a tumblyng barge The people sayled , wythout parfitnes , Throughe the worlde all ...
44 psl.
... werke wyth councell that thou mayst be sure . And who that so doth shall never repent , For his dede is founded on a perfyt grounde , And for to fall it hath none impediment , Wyth surenes it is so hygh - walled rounde . In welth and ...
... werke wyth councell that thou mayst be sure . And who that so doth shall never repent , For his dede is founded on a perfyt grounde , And for to fall it hath none impediment , Wyth surenes it is so hygh - walled rounde . In welth and ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the Middle Ages ... Percy Society Visos knygos peržiūra - 1846 |
Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the ..., 18 tomas Percy Society Visos knygos peržiūra - 1846 |
Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the ..., 18 tomas Percy Society Peržiūra negalima - 1965 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abyde adowne agayne Agaynst attayne ayre beaute Bell Pucell bokes brynge certayne chaunce chere Chyvalry clere comyn wytte connyng countenaunce daye dede degre desyre doth dryve dyde dyvers entent erth evermore fame fayne fayre frendes frome fynde fyre fyrst gentyll goodly grace Graunde Amoure grete gyaunt gyve hath hede herte hole hyghe inwardly joye La Bell Pucell lacketh lady ladyes loked lyfe lyght lyke lyst madame maner mater mede mesure moost myght mynde myne nere nothyng nought nyght payne perfyte Phebus quod resyst rethoryke right anone rode ryde ryght Sapience sayd scyence selfe shal shewe shyne sone sorowe speke stede sterre stode stryfe sundry swete syght therof theyr thou thre thyng thynke toke toure trouth truely Tyll tyme unto Venus vertue waye werke Whan Wherfore whych whyle withouten wofull wolde wonderly wyll wyse wyth wythout ymages
Populiarios ištraukos
75 psl. - Counseyle, and prayed hym to awake To gyve me counseyle what were best to take. Ha, ha! quod he, love doth you so prycke, That yet your heart will nothynge be eased, But evermore be feble and sycke, Tyll that your lady hath it well appesed; Thoughe ye thynke longe, yet ye shall be plesed. I wolde, quod I, that it were as ye say. Fye, fye, quod he, dryve suche dyspayre away, And lyve in hope, whych shall do you good. Joy cometh after, whan the payne is past. Be ye pacyent and sobre in mode; To wepe...
216 psl. - Out of the Lyon to enter the Vyrgyne. Lyke as the worlde was distroyed totally By the virgins sone, so it semed well A virgins sone to redeme it pyteously, Whose hye Godheed in the chosen vessell Forty wekes naturally did dwell. Nature wekes naturally dyd good of kynde, In the vyrgyn he dyd suche nature fynde. Thus wythout nature nature wonderly In a vyrgyn pure openly hath wrought; To the God of nature nothynge truely Impossyble is, for he made of nought Nature fyrst; whyche naturynge hath tought...
201 psl. - Pucell me sente, Agaynst my wedding, of the satyn fyne, Whyte as the milke, a goodly garment, Branded with perle that clerely did shyne; And so the mariage for to determyne Venus me brought to a ryall chappell, Which of fyne golde was wrought every dele. And after that the gay and glorious La Belle Pucell to the chappell was ledde, In a white vesture fayre and precious, Wyth a golden chaplet on her yalow hede; And Lex Ecclesie did me to her wedde; After which wedding there was a great feast, Nothing...
35 psl. - Or els by stedfast argumentacion. The whych was constitute by begynnyng, As on the reason, and if apparaunce Of the cause than by outwarde semyng Be hard and difficulte in the utteraunce, So as the mynde have no perceyveraunce, Nor of the beginnyng can have audience, Than must narracion begynne the sentence. And if it be a lytle probable, From any maner stedfast argument, We ordre it for to be ryght stable, And than we never begyn our sentement, Recityng letters not convenient, But thys commutacion...
155 psl. - Wo worth her maners and her goodlynes; Wo worth her eyes so clere and amyable; Wo worth such cause of my great sicknes; Wo worth pite on her not tendable; Wo worth her minde in disdayne so stable; Wo worth her that hath me fettered fast; And wo worth love that I do spend in wast. Wherefore of right I pray you to remembre All that I wryte unto you right now: How your true love is of age but tendre, His umble service we pray you alow: And he him selfe evermore emprowe, You for to please and give the...
79 psl. - Than in we wente to the garden gloryous, Lyke to a place of pleasure most solacyous. Wyth Flora paynted and wrought curyously, In divers knottes of marvaylous gretenes; Rampande lyons stode up wondersly, Made all of herbes with dulcet swetenes, Wyth many dragons of marvaylos likenes, Of dyvers floures made ful craftely, By Flora eouloured wyth colours sundry.
54 psl. - Edmunde's life martred with treson. Of the fall of prynces, ryght wofully He did endyte in all piteous wyse, Folowynge his auctoure Bocas rufully; A ryght greate boke he did truly compryse, A good ensample for us to dispyse This worlde, so ful of mutabilyte, In whiche no man can have a certente. And thre reasons ryght greatly profytable Under coloure he cloked craftely; And of the chorle he made the fable That shutte the byrde in a cage so closely, The pamflete sheweth it expressely; He fayned also...
143 psl. - And therewithall he caused to depaynte His face and hers, all under his complaynte. And to Venus he made deliveraunce Of his complaint by a short circumstaunce; Whiche ryght anone, when she had it sene, Began to laughe with all the courte I wene. Lo here the fygures of them both certayne, Judge whiche is best favoured of them twayne. Thus Godfrey Gobilyve did make such a sporte, That many lovers to hym did resorte; When I sawe tyme I went to Sapience, Shewyng to her with all my diligence Howe that...
7 psl. - When that these grayhoundes had me so espied, With faunyng chere of great humilitie In goodly haste they fast unto me hyed ; I mused why and wherfore it should be, But I welcomed them in every degre. They leaped oft and were of me ryght fayne; I suffred them, and cheryshed them agayne.
62 psl. - All perfite reason they do so comprehende, That theyr waye and perfite doctryne To the joye above, whiche is celestine. And yet also the perfite physyke, Which appertayneth well to the body, Doth well resemble unto the musyke, Whan the inwarde intrayles tourneth contrary, That nature can not worke dyrectly; Then doth physike the partes interiall In ordre set to their originall. But yet physyke can not be lyberall As the vii. science by good auctorite, Which ledeth the soule the way in specyall By...