The ever green, being a collection of Scots poems, wrote by the ingenious before 1600, publ. by A. Ramsay, Band 11724 |
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Seite 19
... fair Feild far and neir , As they had wont in May frae Yeir to Yeir : To hir thair Quene to mak Obediens , Full law inclynand with dew Reverens . B 2 WITH Obediens and Reverens , as obferved before in the Words Ob ervance and Plefance ...
... fair Feild far and neir , As they had wont in May frae Yeir to Yeir : To hir thair Quene to mak Obediens , Full law inclynand with dew Reverens . B 2 WITH Obediens and Reverens , as obferved before in the Words Ob ervance and Plefance ...
Seite 20
... fair to be sene , With a full hardy Countenance and kene , Before Dam Nature came , and did inclyne , With Vifage bauld , and Courage Leonyne . XIV . THIS Courage Leonyne . This perhaps may be fmil'd at , but there's as much Reason to ...
... fair to be sene , With a full hardy Countenance and kene , Before Dam Nature came , and did inclyne , With Vifage bauld , and Courage Leonyne . XIV . THIS Courage Leonyne . This perhaps may be fmil'd at , but there's as much Reason to ...
Seite 29
... fair , Sr Penny gif thou leif at hame , To bring him furth think thou nae Schame ; I do thee weil to understand , Into thy Bag beir thou his Name , Thy Matter cums better to hand . VII . SR VII . SR Penny now is maid an Owll , A ...
... fair , Sr Penny gif thou leif at hame , To bring him furth think thou nae Schame ; I do thee weil to understand , Into thy Bag beir thou his Name , Thy Matter cums better to hand . VII . SR VII . SR Penny now is maid an Owll , A ...
Seite 35
... fair came pranfand owre the Bents , Thair coftly Cleathing shawd their mighty Rents ; Quhat Heart micht wifh , they wanted not a Myte , The Rubies fhone upon thair Fingers quhyt : And finaly I knew by thair Confents This VERTUE was ...
... fair came pranfand owre the Bents , Thair coftly Cleathing shawd their mighty Rents ; Quhat Heart micht wifh , they wanted not a Myte , The Rubies fhone upon thair Fingers quhyt : And finaly I knew by thair Confents This VERTUE was ...
Seite 40
... fair Renown , Thair is nae Pleafour in this Eard fo grit , As quhen a Luver dois his Lady meit , To raise his Lyf frae mony a deidlie Soun , As hieft Plefour but Comparifoun . I fall the geif in thy Zeirs zoung and sweit , A lufty Halk ...
... fair Renown , Thair is nae Pleafour in this Eard fo grit , As quhen a Luver dois his Lady meit , To raise his Lyf frae mony a deidlie Soun , As hieft Plefour but Comparifoun . I fall the geif in thy Zeirs zoung and sweit , A lufty Halk ...
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The Ever Green, Being a Collection of Scots Poems, Wrote by the Ingenious ... Allan Ramsay,Allan Evergreen Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2023 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
amang auld baith Becauſe Beift beir Blude Cauſe Cheir cleir coud Creid cryd Deid Deil Delyte dois doun dryve Eard evir faft faid fair fall Fame fayd fcho Feild Feir fene Feynd filly flain Flowirs forzet fould frae fuch fuld furth fweit fyne Fyre gaif Geir gif thou Grene grit gude haif hald Heid heir keip King knaw Licht lufty Luve Lyfe lyke Lyon maift mair maiſt Makyne maun meit mekle methocht micht Mous Mynd nane neir nevir nocht owre Qubyt Quha quhair Quhat Quhen Quhilk Quhy Quhyle quhyt Quod quoth reid richt SAE mony ſcho Soutar ſpend Spyce Syne Tailzior tane thair thee ther thir Thocht Timor Timor mortis conturbat trew tuke Tyme uther VIII wald Warld Weir wyde Wyfe Zeirs zour
Beliebte Passagen
Seite viii - Description) as she does in the Scottish Horizon. We are not carried to Greece or Italy for a Shade, a Stream or a Breeze. The Groves rise in our own Valleys; the Rivers flow from our own Fountains, and the Winds blow upon our own Hills. I find not Fault with those Things, as they are in Greece or Italy : But with a Northern Poet for fetching his Materials from these Places, in a Poem, of which his own Country is the Scene ; as our Hymners to the Spring and Makers of Pastorals frequently do.
Seite 85 - The armies met, the trumpet sounds, The dandring drums alloud did touk, Baith armies byding on the bounds, Till ane of them the feild sould bruik. Nae help was thairfor, nane wald jouk, Ferss was the fecht on ilka syde, And on the ground lay mony a bouk Of them that thair did battill byd.
Seite 80 - Ilk ane well harnisit frae hand, To meit and heir quhat he did mein ; He waxit wrath, and vowit tein, Sweirand he wald surpryse the North, Subdew the brugh of Aberdene, Mearns...
Seite 86 - Pursewing shairply in thair way, Thair enemys to tak or slay, Be dynt of forss to gar them yield, Quha war richt blyth to win away, And sae for feirdness tint the feild.
Seite x - Clown can see that the Furrow is crooked, but where is the Man that will plow me one straight ? There is nothing can be heard more silly than one's expressing his Ignorance of his native Language ; yet such there are, who can vaunt of acquiring a tolerable Perfection in the French or Italian Tongues, if they have been a...
Seite i - The Ever Green, being a collection of Scots Poems, wrote by the ingenious before 1600.
Seite 93 - And gaif him dynt for dynt. The golk, the gormaw, and the gled, Beft him with buffettis quhill he bled ; The sparhalk to the spring him sped, Als fers as fyre of flynt.
Seite 211 - Till he with kynd Accent Sayd, Fere let nocht thy Hairt affray, I cum to hier thy Plaint; Thy graining and maining Haith laitlie reikd myne Eir, Debar then affar then All Eirynefs or Feir. VII. FOR. I am ane of a hie Station, The Warden...
Seite 16 - In weid depaynt of mony diverse hew, Sober, benyng, and full of mansuetude, In bright atteir of flouris forgit new, Hevinly of color, quhyt, reid, brown, and blew, Balmit in dew, and gilt with Phebus bemys; Quhyl all the house illumynit of her lemys.
Seite 138 - The kaves and ky met in the loan, The man ran with a rung to red, Than by came an illwilly roan, And brodit his buttoks till they bled : Syne up he tuke a rok of tow, And he sat down to sey the spinning ; He loutit doun our neir the low, Quod he this wark has ill beginning.