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IX. Sir Lancelot du Lake............................................................................................ This ballad ...
Therfore tell me what wight thou art, And what may be thy name." "My name is Lancelot du Lake." Quoth she, "It likes me than: He ...
With mighty strokes most eagerlye Each at the other ran. They wounded were, and bled full sore, They both for breath did stand. ...
He pull'd him downe upon his knee, And rushing off his helm, Forthwith he strucke his necke in two, And, when he had soe done, F ...
X. Corydon's Farewell to Phillis. ............................................................................... is an attempt ...
She would not be intreated, with prayers oft repeated, If she come no more, shall I die therefore? If she come no more, what car ...
XI. Gernutus, the Jew of Venice. ............................................................................... In theLife of P ...
THE FIRST PART IN Venice towne not long agoe A cruel Jew did dwell, Which lived all on usurie, As Italian writers tell. Gernutus ...
"No penny for the loane of it For one year you shall pay; You may doe me as good a turne, Before my dying day. "But we will have ...
"Of the Jews crueltie; setting foorth the mercifulnesse of the Judge towards the Marchant. To the tune ofBlacke and Yellow." SOM ...
Gernutus now waxt franticke mad, And wotes not what to say: Quoth he at last, "Ten thousand crownes I will that he shall pay; "A ...
diffidence, as I have at present before me only the abridgment of the novel which Mr. Johnson has given us at the end of his Com ...
XII. The Passionate Shepherd to his Love................................................................. This beautiful sonnet ...
There will I make thee beds of roses With a thousand fragrant posies, A cap of flowers, and a kirtle Imbrodered all with leaves ...
Since the above was written, Mr. Malone, with his usual discernment, hath rejected the stanzas in question from the other sonne ...
XIII. Titus Andronicus's Complaint........................................................................... The reader has her ...
Just two and twenty of my sonnes were slaine Before we did returne to Rome againe: Of five and twenty sonnes, I brought but thre ...
Then both her hands they basely cutt off quite, Whereby their wickednesse she could not write; Nor with her needle on her sample ...
I fed their foolish veines[4] a certaine space, Untill my friendes did find a secret place, Where both her sonnes unto a post we ...
XIV. Take Those Lips Away. .................................................................................... The first stanza ...
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