Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of Lancaster and ChesterChetham Society., 1879 |
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... ... 4to n . d . 148 PHILIPOTT ( Thomas ) . Poems . By Thomas Philipott , Master of Arts , ( Sometimes ) of Clare - Hall in Cambridge.8vo 1646 149 PIERCE Plowman's Vision . The Vision of Pierce Plowman , vi CONTENTS .
... ... 4to n . d . 148 PHILIPOTT ( Thomas ) . Poems . By Thomas Philipott , Master of Arts , ( Sometimes ) of Clare - Hall in Cambridge.8vo 1646 149 PIERCE Plowman's Vision . The Vision of Pierce Plowman , vi CONTENTS .
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... Hall ; Thus Famine and bleake Dearth do greet the Land , When the Plough's held betweene a Lawyer's hand . I fat with ioy to see how the poore Swaines Do boxe their Country - thyes , carrying their Packets Of writings , yet can neither ...
... Hall ; Thus Famine and bleake Dearth do greet the Land , When the Plough's held betweene a Lawyer's hand . I fat with ioy to see how the poore Swaines Do boxe their Country - thyes , carrying their Packets Of writings , yet can neither ...
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... Hall being considered the first ; he is mentioned by Charles Fitzgeffrey as contesting the palm of priority and merit in satire with Hall , in his Affaniæ , or three books of epigrams in Latin , published at Oxford in 1601 , Satirarum ...
... Hall being considered the first ; he is mentioned by Charles Fitzgeffrey as contesting the palm of priority and merit in satire with Hall , in his Affaniæ , or three books of epigrams in Latin , published at Oxford in 1601 , Satirarum ...
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... Hall in the notice of Pigmalion's Image , and of his accusation against Hall for being obscure . In this prose address he seems to allude to this subject again , and to his coinage of new words : " Yet when by some scuruie chaunce it ...
... Hall in the notice of Pigmalion's Image , and of his accusation against Hall for being obscure . In this prose address he seems to allude to this subject again , and to his coinage of new words : " Yet when by some scuruie chaunce it ...
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... hall , Room for the Spheres , the orbes celestiall Will daunce Kemps ligge . They'le reuel with neate iumps A worthy Poet hath put on their Pumps ? O wits quick trauers , but sauce ceo's slow Good faith ' tis hard for nimble Curio . Yee ...
... hall , Room for the Spheres , the orbes celestiall Will daunce Kemps ligge . They'le reuel with neate iumps A worthy Poet hath put on their Pumps ? O wits quick trauers , but sauce ceo's slow Good faith ' tis hard for nimble Curio . Yee ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of ... Visualização integral - 1913 |
Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine Counties of ... Visualização integral - 1909 |
Remains, Historical and Literary, Connected with the Palatine ..., Volume 47 Visualização integral - 1902 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
alludes allusion amongst Bibl birds black letter Bodleian Library Bound Canto Chetham Christ Collier Colophon commences Crede Cuckow death dedication doth Earl edition Elegie English epigrams Epistle euery F. R. RAINES Faerie Queen farre Gabriel Harvey Gawthorpe Hall gilt leaves giue hart hath haue heauen Heber Henry Henry Peacham holy honour Imprinted John John Marston King known kynge Rycharde Lancashire leaues lett lines London Lord loue Maiesties Manchester manuscript Marston Morocco Muse Nash neuer Niccols noticed Peacham Philomel Pierce poem Poet poetical poetry present copy Prince printed prose published Queen rarity reader reprinted Richard Roberte Crowley romance satire sing Sir Thomas Overbury sold Spenser stanzas sweet teares thee themselues THOMAS HEYWOOD thou tract unto verse vertue Vision vnto volume vpon Warton Whalley Abbey WILLIAM BEAMONT woodcut writer written
Passagens conhecidas
Página 73 - To th' instruments divine respondence meet: The silver sounding instruments did meet With the base murmure of the waters fall; The waters fall with difference discreet, Now soft, now loud, unto the wind did call: The gentle warbling wind low answered to all.
Página 53 - How would it have joyed brave Talbot (the terror of the French) to thinke that after he had lyne two hundred yeares in his Tombe...
Página 74 - Like to an almond tree ymounted hye On top of greene Selinis all alone, With blossoms brave bedecked daintily, Whose tender locks do tremble every one At everie little breath that under heaven is blowne.
Página 133 - And all who knew those Dunces to reward. Amid that area wide they took their stand, Where the tall May-pole once o'erlook'd the Strand, But now (so ANNE and Piety ordain) A Church collects the saints of Drury-lane. 30 With Authors, Stationers obey'd the call; The field of glory is a field for all! Glory, and gain, th' industrious tribe provoke; And gentle Dulness ever loves a joke.
Página 163 - Crede not more than two are known to exist; one in the British Museum, and the other in the library of Trinity College, Cambridge, both of them later than the first printed edition.
Página 23 - A poet of distinguished celebrity in his own day, no less admired for the versatility of his genius in tragedy and comedy, than dreaded for the poignancy of his satire ; in the former department the colleague of Jonson, in the latter the antagonist of Hall."— Zev.
Página 210 - III. Chester's Triumph in Honor of her Prince, as it was performed upon St. George's Day 1610, in the foresaid Citie. Reprinted from the original edition of 1610, with an Introduction and Notes. Edited by the Rev.
Página 49 - ... they cannot sweeten a discourse, or wrest admiration from men reading, as we can : reporting the meanest accident.
Página 47 - Other news I am aduertised of, that a scald trivial lying pamphlet, cald Greens Groats-worth of Wit, is given out to be of my doing. God neuer haue care of my soule, but utterly renounce me, if the least word or sillable in it proceeded from my pen, or if I were any way privie to the writing or printing of it.
Página 172 - To carrie all this pelfe and trash, because their bodies are unfit, Our wantons now in coaches dash from house to house, from street to street.