The Ballads of Scotland, Volume 1William Edmondstoune Aytoun |
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Page xxiv
... English public , or have been so heartily recognised as it is at the present time . Let those who doubt this view , recur to the pages of Churchill , or even later lucubrations , calculated to engender feelings of jealousy and dislike ...
... English public , or have been so heartily recognised as it is at the present time . Let those who doubt this view , recur to the pages of Churchill , or even later lucubrations , calculated to engender feelings of jealousy and dislike ...
Page xl
... English of Shakespeare with that of Chaucer - what a wonderful difference , irrespective of the mere spelling , is at once ap- parent in the vocabulary ! It seems to me quite evident that such changes in the spoken language must have ...
... English of Shakespeare with that of Chaucer - what a wonderful difference , irrespective of the mere spelling , is at once ap- parent in the vocabulary ! It seems to me quite evident that such changes in the spoken language must have ...
Page xlvi
... English minstrels were in the habit of helping themselves freely from the stores of Scottish poesy ; I have no doubt that several of the ballads included in the following series were originally English - in particular I would specify ...
... English minstrels were in the habit of helping themselves freely from the stores of Scottish poesy ; I have no doubt that several of the ballads included in the following series were originally English - in particular I would specify ...
Page lviii
... English poet , Geoffrey Chaucer ( and great indeed is his name , and beyond comparison with others during the lapse of centuries ) , completed his " Canterbury Tales " in the year 1383. The first classical Scots poet , John Barbour ...
... English poet , Geoffrey Chaucer ( and great indeed is his name , and beyond comparison with others during the lapse of centuries ) , completed his " Canterbury Tales " in the year 1383. The first classical Scots poet , John Barbour ...
Page lx
... English poets , Chaucer , and John Gower , Shakespeare's personified prologue , to whom indeed he has acknowledged his obligation : " Unto impugning of my masters dear , Gower and Chaucer , that on the stepés sate Of rhetoric , while ...
... English poets , Chaucer , and John Gower , Shakespeare's personified prologue , to whom indeed he has acknowledged his obligation : " Unto impugning of my masters dear , Gower and Chaucer , that on the stepés sate Of rhetoric , while ...
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Alace amang auld baith bauld Binnorie Blind Harry bonnie mill-dams Border bower castle Clerk Saunders Crown Octavo dear Dickie Douglas doun e'en Earl Edition Edom ELORE English fair fause flowers Foolscap frae gane gar'd Gil Morice gowd green hame hand horse Huntley Item John Johnie King Kingis command Kinmont Willie knee lady lady Elspat ladye Laird Laird's Jock Liddesdale Lizie Lindsay mair maun meikle minstrels Minstrelsy mony mother Motherwell Murray nane ne'er never night o'er Octavo ower owre poem poetry Queen quoth rade recitation ride Scotland Scots Scots kirk Sir Patrick Spens Sir Walter Sir Walter Scott slain spake stanzas steed Syne thee Thomas thou toun trow twa sisters Volumes weel Willie winna Yarrow ye maun ye'll young
Popular passages
Page 113 - THERE lived a wife at Usher's Well, And a wealthy wife was she ; She had three stout and stalwart sons, And sent them oer the sea. They hadna...
Page lii - Up then crew the red, red cock, And up and crew the gray; The eldest to the youngest said,
Page 40 - He has gotten a coat of the even cloth, And a pair of shoes of velvet green ; And till seven years were gane and past, True Thomas on earth was never seen.
Page 39 - So thick beset with thorns and briers? That is the path of righteousness, Though after it but few enquires. 'And see ye not that braid braid road. That lies across that lily leven? That is the path of wickedness. Though some call it the road to heaven, 'And see ye not that bonny road That winds about the fernie brae?
Page 214 - And a harried man I think I be ! " There's naething left at the fair Dodhead, " But a waefu
Page 42 - O that I were where Helen lies ! Night and day on me she cries; Out of my bed she bids me rise, Says, 'Haste and come to me!
Page 4 - They hoysed their sails on Monenday morn, Wi' a' the speed they may ; They hae landed in Noroway, Upon a Wodensday. They hadna been a week, a week, In Noroway, but twae, When that the lords o' Noroway Began aloud to say, — 'Ye Scottishmen spend a' our King's goud, And a
Page 50 - Then up and gat the seventh o' them, And never a word spake he ; But he has striped his bright brown brand Out through Clerk Saunders