Early English Poetry, Ballads, and Popular Literature of the Middle Ages, Volumen7Percy Society, 1842 |
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Términos y frases comunes
ALEXANDER DYCE amongst awey barbed horse behold blysse brest Canterbury Tales Chap crye deth Deus Domine doost doth dryve dwelling erthe euen foole foorth fynde gentleman giue glorie hand Harl Harleian hath haue heauen heere found holy Irish Israell iudgment Jacke of Dover jurie Kerry King knave kyng lawful loue lyif maister meam mercy merry meum michi mightie minde was pretty myn herte Ne reminiscaris nevere no3t nozt oh Lord Percy Society peynes poem poore PRAIER praise pretty foolery Psalms Quia Quoniam quoth Jacke reads reminiscaris sayd schal schulde seruants shal shew sicut Sisera song sorwe soule Stanza stil sunt sweet synne Thanne thé thee thine thing thou art thou hast thou shalt thou wilt Thow thy name tuam unto verse vnto vpon Whan Whanne WILLIAM CHAPPELL wolde words wyll wylt
Pasajes populares
Página 14 - Et non intres injudicium cum servo tuo, Domine ! quia non justificabitur in conspectu tuo omnis vivens. What so evere I have ben here before, Deme me no3t on the hardest wyse ; I have do mys ; 1 will no more, But take me fully to thi servyse.
Página 53 - JACK OF DOVER, his Quest of Inquirie, or his Privy Search for the veriest Foole in England, a collection of Merry Tales, 1604, edited by T.
Página 18 - Notam fac mihi viam in qua ambulem : * quia ad te levavi animam meam. Eripe me de inimicis meis, Domine, ad te confugi : * doce me facere voluntatem tuam, quia Deus meus es tu.
Página 7 - ... astonished that he knew not what to say, for his fellow was gone, and he could not tell where to find him: by which meanes he was constrained to let his action fall, and by the law was condemned to pay her charges, and withall great dammages for troubling her without cause. Well, quoth Jacke of Dover, this, in my minde, was pretty foolery : but yet the foole of all fooles is not heare found, that I looke for.
Página xi - Banshie, as she is called, or household fairy, whose office it is to appear, seemingly mourning while she announces the approaching death of some one of the destined race.
Página 49 - SA WILLIAM HENRY BLACK, ESQ WILLIAM CHAPPELL, ESQ. FSA Treasurer. J. PAYNE COLLIER, ESQ. FSA T. CROFTON CROKER, ESQ. FSA, MRIA PETER CUNNINGHAM, ESQ. REV. ALEXANDER DYCE. WILLIAM JERDAN, ESQ. FSA, MRS L CAPTAIN JOHNS, RM TJ PETTIGREW, ESQ.
Página 30 - ... penance. Seint Ambrose sayth, That penance is the plaining of man for the gilt that he hath don, and no more to do any thing for which him ought to plaine. And som doctour sayth : Penance is the waymenting of man that sorweth for his sinne, and peineth himself, for he hath rnisdon.
Página 33 - J. PAYNE COLLIER, ESQ. FSA T. CROFTON CROKER, ESQ. FSA, MRIA PETER CUNNINGHAM, ESQ. REV. ALEXANDER DYCE. WILLIAM JERDAN, ESQ. FSA, MRSL SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, KH, FRS, FSA TJ PETTIGREW, ESQ. FR S., FSA EF RIMBAKLT, ESQ.
Página 36 - I sy right fresh and gay, And briddes herde I eek lustyly synge ; That to myn herte yaf a confortynge : But evere o thoght me stang unto the herte, That dye I sholde, and hadde no knowynge Whanne, ne whidir, I sholde hennes sterte.