Neuenglisches Lesebuch: zur Einführung in das Studium der Denkmäler selbst nach den handschriften und ältesten Drucken, Band 1Neimeyer, 1895 - 547 Seiten |
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 3 - And for as moche as in the wrytyng of the same my penne is worn / myn hande wery and not stedfast myn eyen dimmed with ouermoche lokyng on the whit paper / and my corage not so prone and redy to laboure as hit hath ben / and that age crepeth on me dayly and febleth all the bodye...
Seite 374 - Poesie as nouices newly crept out of the schooles of Dante Arioste and Petrarch, they greatly pollished our rude and homely maner of vulgar Poesie, from that it had bene before, and for that cause may justly be sayd the first reformers of our English meetre and stile.
Seite 193 - My lorde your father he gretes yow well, Wyth many a noble knyght ; He desyres yow to byde That he may see thys fyght. ' The Baron of Grastoke ys com out of the west, Wyth hym a noble companye ; All they loge at your fathers thys nyght, And the batell fayne wolde they see.
Seite 192 - I wyll holde that I haue hyght. 30 'For thou haste brente Northomberlonde, And done me grete envye; For thys trespasse thou hast me done, The tone of vs schall dye.
Seite 199 - Over castill, towar, and town. This was the Hontynge off the Cheviat ; That tear begane this spurn : Old men that knowen the grownde well yenoughe, Call it the Battell of Otterburn.
Seite 8 - And certaynly our langage now vsed varyeth ferre from that whiche was vsed and spoken whan I was borne. For we Englysshe men ben borne vnder the domynacyon of the mone, whiche is neuer stedfaste but euer wauerynge, wexynge one season, and waneth and dyscreaseth another season. And that comyn Englysshe that is spoken in one shyre varyeth from a nother.
Seite 490 - Word to be spread throughout the world, to give more faith to wicked persuasions of men, which presuming above God's wisdom, and contrary to that which Christ expressly commandeth in his Testament, dare say that it is not lawful for the people to have the same in a tongue that they understand ; because the purity thereof should open men's eyes to see their wickedness ? Is there more danger in the King's subjects, than in the subjects of all other Princes, which, in every of their tongues have the...
Seite 1 - Countee of Flaundres the fyrst day of | marche the yere of the Incarnacion of our said lord god | a thousand foure honderd sixty and eyghte / And ended | and fynysshid in the holy cyte of Colen the . xix . day of | septembre the yere of our sayd lord god a thousand | foure honderd sixty and enleuen...
Seite 490 - I showed and declared the heart of a true subject, which sought the safeguard of his royal person and weal of his commons, to the intent that his Grace, thereof warned, might in due time prepare his remedies against their subtle dreams.
Seite 187 - they bad, " That these traytours thereout not go." But al for nought was that they wrought, For so fast they downe were layde, Tyll they all thre, that so manfulli fought, Were gotten without at a braide.