Chevy Chase,: A Poem. Founded on the Ancient Ballad.. |
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Page 23
... tree , In full baronial blazonry ; And tall steeds fill , in scatter'd files , The deer's deserted domiciles . Unrein the steed , unstring the bow , Fling the light bonnet from your brow ; Your couch is dress'd , your feast is spread ...
... tree , In full baronial blazonry ; And tall steeds fill , in scatter'd files , The deer's deserted domiciles . Unrein the steed , unstring the bow , Fling the light bonnet from your brow ; Your couch is dress'd , your feast is spread ...
Page 68
... tree Lord Percy fell- The green - wood tree he lov'd so well . Not unaveng'd . Within the wood , Behind an oak , a bowman stood ; Whence , safely hid from hostile sight , He aim'd his mortal shafts aright ; And saw , with mingled rage ...
... tree Lord Percy fell- The green - wood tree he lov'd so well . Not unaveng'd . Within the wood , Behind an oak , a bowman stood ; Whence , safely hid from hostile sight , He aim'd his mortal shafts aright ; And saw , with mingled rage ...
Page 71
... tree ! Sweet rest and deep to - night is theirs To - morrow , soon as matin prayers Awake the morn , and convent song , Shall weeping widows hither throng ; On boughs of birch and hazel gray Shall bear their lov'd remains away ; ; Hang ...
... tree ! Sweet rest and deep to - night is theirs To - morrow , soon as matin prayers Awake the morn , and convent song , Shall weeping widows hither throng ; On boughs of birch and hazel gray Shall bear their lov'd remains away ; ; Hang ...
Page 80
... tree , Or my arm a lady's lily hand , That an English lord should lightly me ? Again my lion - banner ground . P. 44 . One of the ancient badges or cognizances of the Percy family was a white lion statant . The Heart that bears the ...
... tree , Or my arm a lady's lily hand , That an English lord should lightly me ? Again my lion - banner ground . P. 44 . One of the ancient badges or cognizances of the Percy family was a white lion statant . The Heart that bears the ...
Page 87
... tree or other object , diving at intervals , as if to catch its prey ; when perched , it sits usually on a bare twig , its head lower than its tail , and in this attitude utters its jarring note . It is a solitary bird , two being ...
... tree or other object , diving at intervals , as if to catch its prey ; when perched , it sits usually on a bare twig , its head lower than its tail , and in this attitude utters its jarring note . It is a solitary bird , two being ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient ballad arms arrow BALLAD OF CHEVY Barons Battle of Otterbourne beneath blade blood bold brave captayns charger cheer CHEVY CHASE Chevy-Chase chiefest chieftain Chyviat clos'd cried dougheti dynt Earl Douglas Earl Percy earth Lord English archers fear feast fiercely fight Ford Castle forest fought gallant ground Haggerston hand hart heart hill hondrith honour hunt hunters king king of Spain knight kyng Lord James Lord James Douglas Lord Percy lord Persè loud lov'd lyffe Maxwell Montgomery morning mort is blown never noble Northumberland o'er owar Percy's poem recheat Robert of Scotland Rokeby rush'd sayd Scarce Scotland Scots Scottish Scottish Border shaft Sir Hewe Sir Philip Sydney slain slayne spear speed steed thear thee ther thorowe thre thro throng treble mort trusty turn'd uppone valiant warlike warrior wear Widdrington Witherington wold woods wounds wyll yerle Yngglishe
Popular passages
Page 99 - The hunting of that day. The stout Earl of Northumberland A vow to God did make, His pleasure in the Scottish woods Three summer days to take; The chiefest harts in Chevy-Chase To kill and bear away.
Page 105 - He had a bow bent in his hand, Made of a trusty tree ; An arrow of a cloth-yard long Up to the head drew he...
Page 94 - To have savyde thy lyffe I wolde have pertyde with My landes for years thre, For a better man, of hart nare of hande, Was not in all the north centre.
Page 100 - Did to the woods resort, With fifteen hundred bowmen bold, All chosen men of might, Who knew full well, in time of need, To aim their shafts aright.
Page 98 - That tear begane this spurn: Old men that knowen the grownde well yenoughe, Call it the Battell of Otterburn. At Otterburn began this spurne Uppon a monnynday: no Ther was the dougghte Doglas slean, The Perse never went away. Ther was never a tym on the march partes Sen...
Page 106 - Against Sir Hugh Montgomery *So right the shaft he set, The gray goose wing that was thereon In his heart's blood was wet. This fight did last from break of day Till setting of the sun ; For when they rung the evening-bell, The battle scarce was done.
Page 93 - I tolde it the beforne, That I wolde never yeldyde be To no man of a woman born.
Page 108 - God be with him, said our king, Sith it will noe better bee ; I trust I have, within my realme, Five hundred as good as hee...
Page 107 - I have not any captain more Of such account as he." Like tidings to King Henry came Within as short a space, That Percy of Northumberland Was slain in Chevy-Chase: "Now God be with him...
Page 82 - ... me ; and I will most willingly do all that you command me with the utmost loyalty in my power ; never doubt it, however I may feel myself unworthy of such a high distinction.