Geoffrey ChaucerGeorge Bagshawe Harrison Harcourt, Brace, 1954 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 69
Sivu 347
... learning of the Schoolmen . ] IV . 2. There be therefore chiefly three vanities in studies , whereby learning hath been most tra- duced : . . . the first , fantastical learning ; the sec- ond , contentious learning ; and the last ...
... learning of the Schoolmen . ] IV . 2. There be therefore chiefly three vanities in studies , whereby learning hath been most tra- duced : . . . the first , fantastical learning ; the sec- ond , contentious learning ; and the last ...
Sivu 440
... learning and to learned men . It was the com- plaint and lamentation of prelates , upon every least breath of a motion to remove pluralities 46 and dis- tribute more equally church revenues , that then all learning would be for ever ...
... learning and to learned men . It was the com- plaint and lamentation of prelates , upon every least breath of a motion to remove pluralities 46 and dis- tribute more equally church revenues , that then all learning would be for ever ...
Sivu 674
... Learning and Rome alike in empire grew ; And arts still followed where her eagles flew ; From the same foes , at last , both felt their doom , And the same age saw learning fall , and Rome . With tyranny , then superstition joined , As ...
... Learning and Rome alike in empire grew ; And arts still followed where her eagles flew ; From the same foes , at last , both felt their doom , And the same age saw learning fall , and Rome . With tyranny , then superstition joined , As ...
Sisältö
On the Late Massacre in Piemont | 41 |
The Canterbury Tales | 54 |
Epithalamion | 104 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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agayn Allas anon brest called Canterbury Tales Chaucer Clerk's Tale creature Crist death Donne doon doth doun drede earth Exeunt eyes Faerie Queene faire Falstaff fear felawe Franklin's Tale grace greet HAML Hamlet hast hath heaven heere herte hight hire hise housbonde King knew koude lady Laertes lord lyve manere mayde moore moost mordred mote myghte nature never night noght noon nothyng Nun's Priest's Tale nyght oother peple play poem poet POLONIUS PRINCE pryvely Queene quod Seint seith seyde seye seyn shal sholde sith song soul Spenser sweet swich tale tell Thanne thee ther thilke things thise thogh thou thought thow thyng trewe trouthe tyme unto verray whan wight withouten wolde wommen woot word wyde wyves ΙΟ