| English poetry - 1788 - 550 pages
...fancies fraile She woxe, yet wist she nether how nor why ; She wist not (silly'mayd) what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy, Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy. XXVIII. So soone as Night had with her pallid hew Defasie the beautie of the shyning skye, , Andrefte... | |
| Edmund Spenser - English poetry - 1807 - 546 pages
...fancies fraile, She woxe, yet wist she nether how nor why ; She wist not, silly ri-ml, what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy ; Yet thought it was not love, hut some melancholy. XXvIII. So soone as Night had with her pallid hew Defaste the heautie of the shyning... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - English poetry - 1810 - 600 pages
...fraile, She woxe ; yet wist she nether how, nor why ; She wist not, silly mayd, what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy ; Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy. So soonn as Night had with her pallid hew Dcfaste the beautie of the shyning skye, And refte from men... | |
| Charles Mills - Chivalry - 1825 - 448 pages
...; And her proud portance and her princely gest, With which she erst triumphed, now did quail, Sad, solemn, sour, and full of fancies frail, She woxe...Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy, f * Fairy Queen, book iii. canto 4, st. 1. f Ibid, book iii. canto ii. st. 27. CHAP. v. There were... | |
| Charles Mills - Chivalry - 1825 - 838 pages
...; And her proud portance and her princely gest, With which she erst triumphed, now did quail, Sad, solemn, sour, and full of fancies frail, She woxe...Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy, f * Fairy Queen, book iii. canto 4, St. 1. f Ibid, book iii. canto ii. st. 27. CHAP. v. There were... | |
| Edmund Spenser - English poetry - 1825 - 412 pages
...fraile, She woxe ; yet wist she nether how, nor why ; She wist not, silly Mayd, what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy; Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy. XXVIII. So soone as Night had with her pallid hew Defaste the beautie of the shyning skye, And refte... | |
| Samuel O'Sullivan - College students - 1825 - 300 pages
...restlessness, in which, like Britomart, after having seen Artegal in the magical mirror, " He wist he was not well at ease, perdy; " Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy," up to the hour, when the consciousness came upon him of his love and its hopelessness. This was a subject... | |
| Robert Southey - English poetry - 1831 - 1038 pages
...fraile, She woxe ; yet wist she nether how, nor why ; She wist not, silly rnayd, what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy ; Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy. So soone as Night had with her pallid hew Defaste the beautie of the shyning skye, And refte from men... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1843 - 388 pages
...fraile, She woxe ; yet wist she nether how, nor why ; She wist not, silly mayd, what she did aile, Yet wist she was not well at ease perdy ; Yet thought it was not love, but some melancholy. xxvni. Po Kaone as Night had with her pallid hew I )' •'•'••! ,lo the beautie of the shyning... | |
| Charles Mills - Chivalry - 1844 - 256 pages
...avalle ; And her proud portanceand her princely gest, With which she erst triumphed, now did quail, Sad, solemn, sour, and full of fancies frail, She woxe...repress the presumption of lovers when circumstances di<l not favour an avowal of passion, they would reprove the sighs and glances which they pretended... | |
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