The Poems of William Dunbar, المجلد 1Society, 1893 |
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الصفحة xxxix
... quhat euir his trappingis cost . " Mr Laing remarks : " Whether the words were written by the king himself , or added in his name by Dunbar as an ingenious mode of expressing his request , the reader 1 Pp . 215-217 . must be left to his ...
... quhat euir his trappingis cost . " Mr Laing remarks : " Whether the words were written by the king himself , or added in his name by Dunbar as an ingenious mode of expressing his request , the reader 1 Pp . 215-217 . must be left to his ...
الصفحة lxx
... Quhat is this lyfe bot ane straucht way to deid ; that on Death beginning— " Doun by ane rever as I red , " 6 5 1 P. 69 , ll . 105-109 . 4 P. 244 . 3 P. 232 . 2 P. 152 . 6 P. 305 . 5 P. 250 . and the poem sometimes called " The Merle ...
... Quhat is this lyfe bot ane straucht way to deid ; that on Death beginning— " Doun by ane rever as I red , " 6 5 1 P. 69 , ll . 105-109 . 4 P. 244 . 3 P. 232 . 2 P. 152 . 6 P. 305 . 5 P. 250 . and the poem sometimes called " The Merle ...
الصفحة cxxxiii
... quhat wyiss , " Dunbar treats the subject of the judgment of the world , which finds cause for censure however a man may conduct himself , and leaves none without blame . He enforces the wholesome moral : - " Now juge thay me baith guid ...
... quhat wyiss , " Dunbar treats the subject of the judgment of the world , which finds cause for censure however a man may conduct himself , and leaves none without blame . He enforces the wholesome moral : - " Now juge thay me baith guid ...
الصفحة cxxxviii
... Quhat is this lyfe bot ane straucht way to deid ? " 8 year . and " On the Warldis Vanity , " beginning— " O wreche , be war ! this warld will wend the fro , " with the refrain- " Vanitas Vanitatum , et omnia Vanitas , ” — which ...
... Quhat is this lyfe bot ane straucht way to deid ? " 8 year . and " On the Warldis Vanity , " beginning— " O wreche , be war ! this warld will wend the fro , " with the refrain- " Vanitas Vanitatum , et omnia Vanitas , ” — which ...
الصفحة cxli
... Quhat me befell , on Gud Friday , Befoir the Croce of sweit Jesu . " 1 We seem to see the penitent prostrate at the foot of the cross , raised by divine power revealing to his soul the mystery of the death of Christ . ESTIMATE OF ...
... Quhat me befell , on Gud Friday , Befoir the Croce of sweit Jesu . " 1 We seem to see the penitent prostrate at the foot of the cross , raised by divine power revealing to his soul the mystery of the death of Christ . ESTIMATE OF ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Abbot of Tungland Aberdeen Albany alliteration allusion amongst Andro Kennedy Angus Ballad Bannatyne Bernard Stewart Bishop Blind Harry cæsura called Chaucer couplet Court D'Aubigny Dance death Discretioun Donald Owre Duke of Ross Dunbar's poems Earl Edinburgh edition England favour Flodden Flyting France Freiris of Berwik French Gavin Douglas Goldyn Targe Henry VIII honour James James IV June king king's Kingis Lady Laing's Lament lines Lord Lord Bernard Stewart Lord of Aubigny Lordis Luve Lyfe Lyndsay Maiſter William Dunbar Maitland Makaris Margaret Tudor Mariit Wemen marriage Master metre nocht penfioun poems of Dunbar poet printed Professor Schipper queen Quenis Chalmer quhair Quhat quhen quhilk reference refrain reign rhymes royal satire Scot Scotch Scotland Scottish Poetry SCOTTISH TEXT SOCIETY Sir Thomas Norray Solistaris sowld St Andrews Stobo strophe style Testament thair Thistle thow TITLE OF POEM Treasurer's Accounts verse Villon wald Wedo William Dunbar writer
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة cxxxiv - The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel; But do not dull thy palm with entertainment Of each new-hatched, unfledged comrade.
الصفحة cxxxii - Gret reuth it wer that so suld be ; Timor mortis conturbat me. Sen he hes all my brether tane, He will nocht lat me lif alane, On forse I man his nyxt pray be ; Timor mortis conturbat me.
الصفحة lxxxviii - Als lang as I did beir the freiris style, In me, God wait, wes mony wrink and wyle; In me wes falset with every wicht to flatter, Quhilk mycht be flemit with na haly watter; I wes ay reddy all men to begyle.
الصفحة ccxxiv - 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, Of dytees and of songes glade, The whiche he for my sake made...
الصفحة xc - But trusteth wel, I am a sotherne man, I cannot geste, rom, ram, ruf, by my letter, And, God wote, rime hold I but litel better.
الصفحة xxxviii - As herb of vertew and of odor sueit ; And lat no nettill vyle, and full of vyce, Hir fallow to the gudly flour delyce ; Nor latt no wyld weid, full of churlicheness, Compair hir till the lilleis nobilness. 140 Nor hald non vdir flour in sic denty...
الصفحة cii - It does honour to the good sense of this nation, that while all Europe was captivated with the bewitching charms of Chivalry and Romance, two of our writers in the rudest times could see through the false glare that surrounded them, and discover whatever was absurd in them both. Chaucer wrote his ' Rhyme of sir Thopas ' in ridicule of the latter ; and in the following poem we have a humorous burlesque of the former.
الصفحة cvii - In velvet gownes and in cheynes of gold. By Julyus Cesar thy Tour founded of old May be the hous of Mars victoryall, Whose artillary with tonge may not be told : London, thou art the flour of Cities all.
الصفحة cv - Lang heff I maid of ladyes quhytt, Now of ane blak I will indytt, That landet furth of the last schippis ; Quhou fain wald I discrywe perfytt, My ladye with the mekle lippis.
الصفحة cx - Welcum oure indeficient adiutorie, 25 That evir our Naceoun helpit in thare neyd; That neuer saw Scot yit indigent nor sory, Bot thou did hym suport, with thi gud deid...