| Edmund Spenser - 1758 - 514 pages
...ftrive : Ne dare I like, but through infufion fweet Of thine own fprite (which doth in me furvive) I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning fo I may the rather meet. XXXV. Cambellos Sifter was fair Canacee, That was the learned ft Lady in... | |
| Geoffrey Chaucer - English poetry - 1841 - 486 pages
...strive : Ne dare I like, but through infusion sweet Of thine own spirit (which doth in me survive) I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. DENHAM. ON MR. ABRAHAM COWLEY, IN HIS WORKS, PRINTED 1709. p. 84. OLD CHAUCER, like the morning star,... | |
| 1843 - 586 pages
...STAFFORD BROWN. MA, Perpetual Curate of Christ Church, Derry Hill, Wilts. 1 vol. 12mo, price 5s. cloth. I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning bo fmay the rather meetc." London: Darlon and Clark, Holhorn Hill. [1625] Dedicated by Permission to... | |
| Geoffrey Chaucer - 1845 - 500 pages
...strive ; Ne dare I like ; but, through infusion sweet, Of thine own spirit which doth in me survive, I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. And how does Edmund Spenser fulfil a project so full of hopefulness ? Let us see. Chaucer, as though... | |
| George Lillie Craik - 1845 - 276 pages
...strive : Ne dare I like ; but, through infusion sweet Of thine own spirit which doth in me survive, 1 follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. The allusion is to the unfinished Tale of the Squire in the Canterbury Tales, the last lines of which... | |
| Eliphalet L. Rice - American literature - 1846 - 432 pages
...strive : Ne dare I like, hut through infusion sweet Of thine own spirit (which doth in me survive) 1 follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. FAIRY QU«»N.— L. 4. Canto 2. Old CHAUCER, like the morning star, To us discovers day from far,... | |
| Edmund Spenser, George Gilfillan - 1859 - 392 pages
...strive : No dare I like; but, through infusion sweet Of thine own spirit which doth in me survive, I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. XXXV. Cambello's sister was fair Canacee, That was the learnedst lady in her days, Well seen1 in every... | |
| 1869 - 974 pages
...Spenser takes up the story in his "Fairy Queen," Book IT., cantos ii. and iii., saying of Chaucer, — "I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet" (145) By Hassinger, in whose plays Milton was well read, Consort is similarly employed, eg, Morisca... | |
| Arthur Penrhyn Stanley - Canterbury, Eng. (Diocese) - 1869 - 804 pages
...Worthies, p. 97 :— Dan Chaucer, well of English undefiled, On Fame's eternal bead-roll to be filed, I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet. 1 iOl. (Walpole's Anecdotes of Painting, 241.) 1 He raised a subscription for ' re' storing it in durable... | |
| Geoffrey Chaucer - 1870 - 664 pages
...; which Nor dare I like ; but, through infusion sweet Of thine own spirit which doth in me survive, I follow here the footing of thy feet, That with thy meaning so I may the rather meet.5 Cambello's sister was fair Canacé, That was the learncd'st lady in her day«, Well seen G in... | |
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