A Book of Elizabethan LyricsFelix Emmanuel Schelling |
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Page xxiv
... thee leave , love me no more , " or in the finished variation of the same theme in sonnet form : " Since there's no help . " In quite another sphere , Drayton has achieved the best war - song of his age , if not of English litera- ture ...
... thee leave , love me no more , " or in the finished variation of the same theme in sonnet form : " Since there's no help . " In quite another sphere , Drayton has achieved the best war - song of his age , if not of English litera- ture ...
Page xlvi
... thee , where were despair ? The loss is but easy , which smiles can repair . A stranger would please thee , if she was as fair.1 Modes more usually employed to compass variety of cadence are found in the increasing freedom with which ...
... thee , where were despair ? The loss is but easy , which smiles can repair . A stranger would please thee , if she was as fair.1 Modes more usually employed to compass variety of cadence are found in the increasing freedom with which ...
Page xlix
... thee full of blindness , And then kills thee with unkindness , etc.2 In a long poem , however , this at times becomes forced . The greatest possible variety as to the number and arrange- ment of rime correspondences is to be found in ...
... thee full of blindness , And then kills thee with unkindness , etc.2 In a long poem , however , this at times becomes forced . The greatest possible variety as to the number and arrange- ment of rime correspondences is to be found in ...
Page lvi
... stock , the stone , the ox , the ass , came running . Morley ! but this enchanting To thee , to be the music god , is wanting ; 1 Musa Madrigalesca , p . 79 . And yet thou needst not fear him ; Draw thou lvi INTRODUCTION .
... stock , the stone , the ox , the ass , came running . Morley ! but this enchanting To thee , to be the music god , is wanting ; 1 Musa Madrigalesca , p . 79 . And yet thou needst not fear him ; Draw thou lvi INTRODUCTION .
Page 2
... thee , dear wench , I write , That know'st my mirth , but not my moan . I pray God grant thee deep delight , To live in joys when I am gone . I cannot live , it will not be , I die to think to part from thee . 35 SIR WALTER RALEIGH ...
... thee , dear wench , I write , That know'st my mirth , but not my moan . I pray God grant thee deep delight , To live in joys when I am gone . I cannot live , it will not be , I die to think to part from thee . 35 SIR WALTER RALEIGH ...
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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