Early English Poetry, Ballads and Popular Literature of the Middle Ages: Ed. from Original Manuscripts and Scarce Publications ...Percy society, 1965 - English literature |
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Page xxxvi
... brought , Whose smell and odour so swete and marvelous With fragrant savour inbaumeth all the house ; As Muscadell , Caprike , Romney and Malvesy , From Gene * brought , from Greece or Hungary ; Suche shall he drinke , suche shall to ...
... brought , Whose smell and odour so swete and marvelous With fragrant savour inbaumeth all the house ; As Muscadell , Caprike , Romney and Malvesy , From Gene * brought , from Greece or Hungary ; Suche shall he drinke , suche shall to ...
Page xlvi
... Brought in be dishes the table for to fill , But not one is brought in order at thy will : That thou would have first and lovest principall Is brought to the borde ofte times last of all . With breade and rude meate when thou art ...
... Brought in be dishes the table for to fill , But not one is brought in order at thy will : That thou would have first and lovest principall Is brought to the borde ofte times last of all . With breade and rude meate when thou art ...
Page 17
... brought a bed of a boy , in September 28th , 1643 . The girl was named Elizabeth , and the boy Charles . The girl God was pleased to take from me by death , when she was not a year and a quarter old . For which I was much afflicted ...
... brought a bed of a boy , in September 28th , 1643 . The girl was named Elizabeth , and the boy Charles . The girl God was pleased to take from me by death , when she was not a year and a quarter old . For which I was much afflicted ...
Contents
THE CYTEZEN AND UPLONDYSHMAN | |
AN INTERLUDE OF THE FOUR ELEMENTS | 1 |
INTERLUDE OF THE DISOBEDIENT CHILD | |
1 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
agayne aske began better brought called cause colde Coridon Cornix court courtiers cyte daughter daye death desire doore doth Earl father Faustus feare finde fortune give gone grounde hande harde hath heare himselfe honour hope husband kinde king knowe labour Lady leave live London looke Lord lyfe lyke maner married Mary matter maye meane minde mynde nature never night nought payne person playne pleased pleasure poore pray present reason rest Rich shalt shee shewed sight Sometime sonne speake tell thee therfore theyr thing thinke Thomas thou thou art thou hast thought thynge told tooke trouble tyme unto Warwick whan wife wolde woman worlde wyfe wyll wyse yerth