Sir Philip Sidney: Type of English Chivalry in the Elizabethan AgeG.P. Putnam's Sons, 1914 - 384 pages |
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Page 16
... verse helps us to see as they were three centuries ago , and as they are with very little change to - day ; the undulating ex- * " Touch " was a costly stone , hard and black , used as stone " in testing gold . " touch- PENSHURST PLACE ...
... verse helps us to see as they were three centuries ago , and as they are with very little change to - day ; the undulating ex- * " Touch " was a costly stone , hard and black , used as stone " in testing gold . " touch- PENSHURST PLACE ...
Page 35
... verse ; but , as he complained , " when I came to Court it was told me it was no war I had made , nor worthy to be called a war , for that Shane O'Neill was but a beg- gar , an outlaw , and one of no force . " And his other zealous work ...
... verse ; but , as he complained , " when I came to Court it was told me it was no war I had made , nor worthy to be called a war , for that Shane O'Neill was but a beg- gar , an outlaw , and one of no force . " And his other zealous work ...
Page 96
... verses , proses , or poetical inventions , " specially prepared for them , being over on the 27th of July , the Queen and her courtiers next went to Lichfield , where they occupied eight days in other entertain- ments . Thence they ...
... verses , proses , or poetical inventions , " specially prepared for them , being over on the 27th of July , the Queen and her courtiers next went to Lichfield , where they occupied eight days in other entertain- ments . Thence they ...
Page 143
... verse : " To one whose state is raised over all , Whose face doth oft the bravest sort enchant , Whose mind is such as wisest minds appal , Who in one - self these divers gifts can plant ; How dare I , wretch , seek there my woes to ...
... verse : " To one whose state is raised over all , Whose face doth oft the bravest sort enchant , Whose mind is such as wisest minds appal , Who in one - self these divers gifts can plant ; How dare I , wretch , seek there my woes to ...
Page 144
... verses . " Next the rivals stated their several claims in song , Espilus's fellow - shep- herds , the while , " setting in with the recorders . which they bare in their bags like pipes , " and Therion's fellow - foresters " with the ...
... verses . " Next the rivals stated their several claims in song , Espilus's fellow - shep- herds , the while , " setting in with the recorders . which they bare in their bags like pipes , " and Therion's fellow - foresters " with the ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards Arcadia Areopagus Astrophel and Stella August brother Castle cause Cecil chivalry Countess of Pembroke Court courtiers courtly daughter death Devereux doth doubtless Dudley Duke of Anjou duties Dyer Earl of Essex Earl of Leicester Earl of Oxford Earl of Warwick Edward Emperor England English ENGRAVING entertained eyes father favour Frobisher Fulke Greville Gabriel Harvey Harvey hath heart honour Hubert Languet husband Ireland John Casimir King Lady Sidney Leicester House Leicester's letter living London Lord Burghley Lord Deputy lordship Majesty Majesty's marriage married Mary matter ment mind months Musidorus Netherlands noble Penelope Devereux Penshurst PENSHURST PLACE Philoclea poems poet Prince Protestant Queen Elizabeth Rich Robert sent Sidney's Sir Francis Walsingham Sir Henry Sidney Sir Henry's Sir Philip Sidney Sir William sister sonnets soon Spain Spenser Thomas thought tion uncle unto verse wife Wilton written young