A Book of Elizabethan LyricsFelix Emmanuel Schelling |
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Page xxxi
... fair and fleeting , in the hearty bacchanal of good cheer and good fellowship , or in the love song with its flashing prismatic lights and deep , rich shadows , we have here the perfection of winged music , wedded to the perfection of ...
... fair and fleeting , in the hearty bacchanal of good cheer and good fellowship , or in the love song with its flashing prismatic lights and deep , rich shadows , we have here the perfection of winged music , wedded to the perfection of ...
Page xlvi
... fair.1 Modes more usually employed to compass variety of cadence are found in the increasing freedom with which later Elizabethan lyrists used ( 1 ) the distribution of rime- correspondences with correspondences as to length of verse ...
... fair.1 Modes more usually employed to compass variety of cadence are found in the increasing freedom with which later Elizabethan lyrists used ( 1 ) the distribution of rime- correspondences with correspondences as to length of verse ...
Page xlvii
... fair a flight he makes ! How upward and direct ! In Whilst pleased Apollo Smiles in his sphere to see the rest affect 5 In vain to follow . This swan is only his , And Phoebus ' love cause of his blackness is.1 Here only two of the ...
... fair a flight he makes ! How upward and direct ! In Whilst pleased Apollo Smiles in his sphere to see the rest affect 5 In vain to follow . This swan is only his , And Phoebus ' love cause of his blackness is.1 Here only two of the ...
Page lxv
... fair , and in fair time will cease , For fear fair time will not continue still : So they may mourn which have thy heart possessed , For fear of change , and hope of change may ease Their hearts whom grief of change doth now molest.1 ...
... fair , and in fair time will cease , For fear fair time will not continue still : So they may mourn which have thy heart possessed , For fear of change , and hope of change may ease Their hearts whom grief of change doth now molest.1 ...
Page 3
... fair ; There is none hath a form so divine In the earth or the air . Such a one did I meet , good sir , Such an angel - like face , Who like a queen , like a nymph , did appear , By her gait , by her grace . She hath left me here all ...
... fair ; There is none hath a form so divine In the earth or the air . Such a one did I meet , good sir , Such an angel - like face , Who like a queen , like a nymph , did appear , By her gait , by her grace . She hath left me here all ...
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Common terms and phrases
Astrophel and Stella BARNABE BARNES Beaumont beauty BEN JONSON birds Breton bright Bullen Campion couplet Daniel Davison death delight Dirge Donne doth Drayton Drummond earth Elizabethan Elizabethan lyric England's Helicon English eyes fair fancy fear Fleay Fletcher flowers Francis Beaumont golden grace Gram green Grosart hath heart heaven Henry honor Italian Jonson kiss lady live Love's lovers Lyrics from Elizabethan lyrists madrigal metre metrical Michael Drayton mistress Muse never NICHOLAS BRETON night nonny passion pastoral Philip Rosseter Phyllis play pleasure poem poetry poets praise pretty printed quatorzain Queen rimes roses SAMUEL DANIEL sense Shakespeare shepherd Sidney sighs sing sleep Song Books sonnet sorrow soul Spenser stanza sweet content tercets thee Thomas THOMAS CAMPION THOMAS DEKKER thou art thought trochaic unto verse wanton weep whilst WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE words writing written ΙΟ