Tales of the Seven Deadly Sins: Being the Confessio Amantis |
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Page ix
... glad your ear and please your eyes . It hath been sung at festivals , On ember eves and holy ales ; And lords and ladies in their lives Have read it for restoratives . " To all of us Gower may now go on to repeat other lines of the same ...
... glad your ear and please your eyes . It hath been sung at festivals , On ember eves and holy ales ; And lords and ladies in their lives Have read it for restoratives . " To all of us Gower may now go on to repeat other lines of the same ...
Page 33
... glad To writé so as he me bad . And eke my fere is well the lasse , That none envié shall compasse Without a resonable wite 1 To feigne and blamé , that I write . A gentil herte his tungé stilleth That it malicé none distilleth But ...
... glad To writé so as he me bad . And eke my fere is well the lasse , That none envié shall compasse Without a resonable wite 1 To feigne and blamé , that I write . A gentil herte his tungé stilleth That it malicé none distilleth But ...
Page 50
... glad , and now gladnesse awey , And yet it may nought be with- stonde For ought that men may under- stonde . Apon the point that is befalle Of love , in which that I am falle , I thenké tellé my matere . Now herken , who that woll it ...
... glad , and now gladnesse awey , And yet it may nought be with- stonde For ought that men may under- stonde . Apon the point that is befalle Of love , in which that I am falle , I thenké tellé my matere . Now herken , who that woll it ...
Page 61
... Glad was her innocéncé tho Of suché wordés as she herd , With humble chere and thus an- swerd And saidé , that the goddés will She was all redy to fulfill , That by her husébondés leve She wolde in Ysis temple at eve Upon her goddés ...
... Glad was her innocéncé tho Of suché wordés as she herd , With humble chere and thus an- swerd And saidé , that the goddés will She was all redy to fulfill , That by her husébondés leve She wolde in Ysis temple at eve Upon her goddés ...
Page 67
... glad semblaunt ther- inne : For though Fortuné make hem winne , Yet grucchen they ; and if they lese There is no waié for to chese Wherof they mighten stonde ap- pesed . So ben they comunly disesed , There may no welth ne no pouerte ...
... glad semblaunt ther- inne : For though Fortuné make hem winne , Yet grucchen they ; and if they lese There is no waié for to chese Wherof they mighten stonde ap- pesed . So ben they comunly disesed , There may no welth ne no pouerte ...
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Common terms and phrases
allé anone atté last awey axeth ayein befalle boke bokés bothé causé chere clepéd comun counseil couth daiés dede deth doth doughter drede ellés ensample fader feith firsté Forthý Fortúne full ofte goddés godé goth greté haddé hast hath hede herdé herté heven highé honde hote houndés ilké inough kepe king kingés knight lady lawé legé leve lich litel loke londe lord lové lust lusty maketh maner mannés matere mede mighté mochel moré nethéles nought ofté oldé owné pees pité Popé praide rede reson saidé sain saith samé shuldé sigh sondry sone sorwe spede speke stant stede stonde stood suché také talé thanné thenke thenketh therto therupon thilké thing thou shalt thought timé to-fore toke tolde trouth understonde unto weived weré weren werré whan Wherof whilom winne wise wist wite withouté woldé woll nought wordés worthy yive yongé
Popular passages
Page 438 - Withoute makynge any more, Of love and of his dedly hele, Which no phisicien can hele. For his nature is so divers, That it hath evere som travers Or of to moche or of to lite, That pleinly mai noman delite, 3160 Bot if him faile or that or this.
Page 83 - The thridde weke, and tell him pleine To every point, what it amounteth. And if so be that he miscounteth To make in his answere a faile, There shall none other thinge availe, The king saith, but he shall be dede And lese his goodes and his hede. This knight was sory of this thinge, And wolde excuse him to the kinge ; But he ne wolde him nought forbere, And thus the knight of his answere Goth home to take avisement.
Page vii - And while he thus touches the root of his country's philosophy, the form of his prayer that what he has written may be what he would wish it to be, is still a thoroughly sound definition of good English writing. His prayer is that there may be no word of untruth, and that 'each word may answer to the thing it speaks of, pleasantly and fitly ; that he may flatter in it no one, and seek in it no praise above the praise of God. Give me,' he asks, ' that there shall be less vice and more virtue for my...
Page 186 - And fome time into Tartarie, So that thefe heralds on him crie : Vailant, vailant, lo, where he goth. And than he yiveth hem golde and cloth, So that his fame mighte fpringe And to his ladies ere bringe Some tiding of his worthinefTe, So that me might of his prowefle Of that me herde men recorde The better unto his love accorde...
Page 265 - That lighter is to fle 1 the flint Than gete of him in hard or neisshe Only the value of a reisshe Of good in helping of an other, Nought though it were his owne brother. For in the cas of yift and lone Stant every man for him alone.
Page 434 - And grete well Chaucer, when ye mete. As my disciple and my poete ; For in the floures of his youthe, In sondry wyse, as he wel couthe...
Page 295 - ... for 4 he should seem fresh : And thus he looketh on his flesh, Right as a hawk which hath a sight Upon the fowl, there he shall light : And as he were a...
Page 411 - And se your owne lege men With other that ben of your ken That live in longing and desire Till ye be come ayein to Tire. This tale after the king it had Pentapolim all oversprad. There was no joie for to seche, For every man it had in speche And saiden all of one accorde : ' A worthy king shall ben our lorde ; That thought us first an hevinesse Is shape us now to great gladndsse.
Page 70 - ... frendes : sothly, if they pray for him that is not worthy and able, it is simonie, if he take the benefice : and if he be worthy and able, ther is non.