10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ALEGGEAUNCE»
Discover the use of
aleggeaunce in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
aleggeaunce and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Faerie Queene: Complete in Five Volumes: Book One; Book ...
What bootes3 it him from death to be unbownd, To be captived in endlesse
duraunce4 Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce?5 43 Still as his wound
did gather, and grow hole,6 So still his hart woxe sore, and health decayd:
Madnesse ...
Edmund Spenser, Abraham Stoll, 2008
2
The works of Edmund Spenser, with notes by H.J. Todd
To be captived in endlesse doiraunce Of sorrow and despeyre without
aleggeaunce! • XLIH. • A Still as his wound did gather, and grow hole, ( So still
his hart woxe fore, and health decayd : Madnefle to save a part, and lose the
whole !
Edmund Spenser, Henry John Todd, 1805
3
Spenser: The Faerie Queene
What bootes it him from death to be vnbownd, To be captiued in endlesse
duraunce Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce? 43 Still as his wound
did gather, and grow hole, So still his hart woxe sore, and health decayd:
Madnesse to ...
Aleggeaunce, allegiance, ii. 29. Alienaunce = alienacioun, alienation, the
process of aliening or conveying away property, i. 54. Alloigner, Aloygner =
esloigner (m. fr. Eloigner), to remove, eloin, i. 44, 67. also to alien, i. 69, where
perhaps we ...
5
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser: With a Memoir
What bootes it him from death to be unbownd, To be captived in endlesse
duraunce Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce 8 ! 43 Still as his wound
did gather, and grow hole,So still his hart woxe sore, and health decayd :
Madnesse to ...
6
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
... was sound, Through an unwary dart, which did rebownd From her faire eyes
and gratious countenaunce : What bootes it him from death to be unbownd, To be
captived in endlesse duraunce Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce ?
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
7
Select Works of the British Poets, from Chaucer to Jonson, ...
What bootes it him from death to be unhownd, To be captived in endlésse
durafmce Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce! Still as his wound did
gather, and grow hole, So still his hart woxe sore, and health decayd: Madnesse
to save ...
Robert Southey, Fulke Greville (Baron Brooke), Stephen Hawes, 1831
8
The Faery queene, book III-IV
... was sound, Through an unwary dart, which did rebowrrd From her faire eyes
and gratious countenaunce: What bootes it him from death to be unbownd, To be
captived in endlesse duraunce ' Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce?
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
9
The Works of the British Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical ...
... Through an unwary dart, which did rcbownd From her faire eyes and gret-tious
countcnaunce : What bootes it him srom death to be unbownd, To be captived in
endlesse duraunce Of sorrow and dcspcyrc' without aleggeaunce I t xLm.
10
The works of Edmund Spenser: with a selection of notes from ...
... 86, 146 Affronting, 202 Africk, 140 Ages, 43 Aggrace, 103 Aggrate, 160, 287,
838 Aghast, 46 Aglets, 302 Agraste, 51 Agreeably, 822, 842 Aguisd, 68 Aguize,
88, 425 Aguizd, C9 Albe, 847 Albee, 248 Albion, 100 Alegge, 870 Aleggeaunce,
...
Edmund Spenser, Henry John Todd, 1869