Deloney's Gentle Craft: The First Part, Volume 1 |
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Page 7
... romance and fabliau inherited from the Middle Ages and enshrined in the pages of Caxton , the Bestiaries , the Jest Books , Boccaccio , Amadis of Gaul , and the countless other romances of Italy , France , and England . His work was ...
... romance and fabliau inherited from the Middle Ages and enshrined in the pages of Caxton , the Bestiaries , the Jest Books , Boccaccio , Amadis of Gaul , and the countless other romances of Italy , France , and England . His work was ...
Page 8
... romance , Guy of Warwick . St. Hugh's adventures are similar to Guy's in many points . Both are first rejected by ... romances , and it may be that the only original contribution that Deloney made to the story was the circumstance of St ...
... romance , Guy of Warwick . St. Hugh's adventures are similar to Guy's in many points . Both are first rejected by ... romances , and it may be that the only original contribution that Deloney made to the story was the circumstance of St ...
Page 12
... romance enough for anything within the Gentle Craft itself , but Deloney knew his readers , and inserted , not without a delicate mastery of form , by - plots that dealt with love and lovers ' pains . But the main interest centres round ...
... romance enough for anything within the Gentle Craft itself , but Deloney knew his readers , and inserted , not without a delicate mastery of form , by - plots that dealt with love and lovers ' pains . But the main interest centres round ...
Page 13
... romances from their seats , and with the growth of allied and derivative literatures in Italy and France , there appeared in England the beginnings , halting and fugitive at first , of a type of prose- writing which has gained steadily ...
... romances from their seats , and with the growth of allied and derivative literatures in Italy and France , there appeared in England the beginnings , halting and fugitive at first , of a type of prose- writing which has gained steadily ...
Page 14
... romance , known as the picaresque , from the Spanish word picaro , a rogue -was new to England , though it had appeared in Spain in Lazarillo de Tormes , first published in 1554. There is little plot in Jack Wilton , but the work has ...
... romance , known as the picaresque , from the Spanish word picaro , a rogue -was new to England , though it had appeared in Spain in Lazarillo de Tormes , first published in 1554. There is little plot in Jack Wilton , but the work has ...
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Common terms and phrases
adown alderman answered apprentice attire beauty blood bottle called coming Crispin and Crispianus daughter dear delight Deloney Deloney's Diocletian door doth drink Dutchman Elizabethan England Euphuistic eyes fair Winifred faith father favour Flintshire Florence foynes friar Gauls Gentle Craft give hath hear heart Hey dery honour Hugh's bones husband Iphicratis Islington John the Frenchman journeyman king lady live London Lord Mayor lovers Lyly maid marriage married Master Eyre Maximinus merchant merry mind mistress never Nicholas novel pray prentices prince princess quoth Crispin quoth Haunce romance Saint saying Sheriff shew shoemaker shoemaker's Shoemaker's Holiday shoes Shrove Tuesday Simon Eyre Sir Hugh song soon sorrows sort speak stay story sweet tell thee thereof therewithal Thomas Deloney Thomas Nash thou art thou hast thou shalt thousand pounds thyself trade Tush tyrant unto venison Whereupon wife wine words Xenocrates young
Popular passages
Page 93 - ... used or occupied within the realm of England or Wales; except he shall have been brought up therein seven years at the least as an apprentice...
Page 64 - Now God help you,' quoth she, 'I pray God make us able 5 to pay every man his own, that we may live out of debt and danger and drive the wolf from the door, and I desire no more.
Page 64 - His wife hearing him say so was inflamed with the desire thereof, as women are (for the most part) very covetous: that matter running still in her mind, she could scant find in her heart to spare him time to go to supper, for very eagerness to animate him on, to take that bargain upon him.
Page 85 - City: these were the words, little thinking, (God wot) that euer it should come to passe: but such was the great goodnesse of our God, who setteth vp the humble, and pulleth down the proud, to bring whom he pleaseth to the seat of Honour. For as the scripture witnesseth, Promotion cometh neither from the East nor from the West, but from him that is the giuer of all good things, the mighty Lord of heauen and earth. Wherefore wife, seeing God hath bestowed that vpon me that I neuer looked for; it is...
Page 63 - ... call, hammering this matter in his head. At last his wife came to him, saying: "Husband, what mean you that you do not come to supper? Why speak you not, man? Hear you, good husband? Come away, your meat will be cold.
Page 62 - ... length he was married, and got him a shop, and laboured hard daily, and his young wife was never idle, but straight when she had nothing to do, she sat in the shop and spun: and having lived thus alone a...
Page 77 - Nay, I pray you, come in and drink with me before you go." Then said he: "Wife, bring me forth the pasty of venison, and set me here my little table, that these gentlemen may eat a bit with me before they go.
Page 43 - Notwithstanding, they thought good to keep their service, as their lives' surest refuge. At what time they both bent their whole minds to please their master and dame, refusing nothing that was put to them to do, were it to wash dishes, scoure kettles, or any other thing whereby they thought their dame's favour might be gotten...
Page 86 - At what time they (in token of thankful nesse) flung vp their Caps, giuing a great shout, and incontinently they all quietly departed. Then after this, Sir Simon Eyer builded Leaden-Hall, appointing that in the midst thereof, there should be a Market place kept euery \ Munday for Leather, where the Shoemakers of London, for their more ease, might buy of the Tanners without seeking any further.
Page 63 - I am myself but a stranger in this country and utterly unacquainted with merchants, but I dwell with one in this city that is a very honest man, and it may be that he can help you to some that will deal with you for it, and if you think it good, I will move him in it, and in the mean space, I'll bring you where you may have a very good lodging. To-morrow morning I will come to you again.