10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «BRAGLY»
Discover the use of
bragly in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
bragly and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
Of old Sir Robert Menywell it is not necessary to speak, as will be presently seen;
and it would be tedious to the courteous reader, were we more particular about
Mr. Bragly the merchant. Our story chiefly relates to their sons, and their progeny.
James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch, 1833
Bragly now proposed to take the whole at a price which would but half satisfy his
claim, leaving him still hopelessly in debt ; and the ruinous proposition could not
be refused, for Bragly spoke peremptorily, as Freeport had not heard him speak ...
Of old Sir Robert Merrywell it is not necessary to speak, as will be presently seen
; and it would be tedious to the courteous reader, were we more particular about
Mr. Bragly the merchant. Our story chiefly relates to their sons, and their progeny
...
4
Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country
Of old Sir Robert Menywell it is not necessary to speak, as will be presently seen ;
and it would be tedious to the courteous reader, were we more particular about
Mr. Bragly the merchant. Our story chiefly relates to their sons, and their progeny.
Of old Sir Robert Merrywell it is not necessary to speak, as will be presently seen
; and it would be tedious to the courteous reader, were we more particular about
Mr. Bragly the merchant. Our story chiefly relates to their sons, and their progeny
...
James Anthony Froude, John Tulloch, Thomas Carlyle, 1833
“But you're making money, too,” said Bragly. “Not if I'm giving it all to you.” “It's still
your money; you can have it any time you want,” Bill Bragly said, now wanting the
farmer out of his bank. “If I can have it, why would I give it to you?” “You know ...
Rufus "Junior" Hickman Jr, 2010
7
Faerie queene. book VI. Two cantos of mutabilitie. ...
Seest not thilke1 same hawthorne studde,9 How bragly 3 it begins to budde, And
utter4 his tender head? 15 Flora nowe calleth forth eche flower, And bids make
readie M3ias bower, That newe is upryst5 from bedd: Tho6 shall wee sporten in ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1845
8
On Translating Homer: Last Words : a Lecture Given at Oxford
Words like bragly and bulhin offer no parallel to these words; because the reader,
from his entire want of familiarity with the words bragly and bulhin, has no clear
sense of them poetically. Perplexed by his knowledge of the philological aspect ...
Accordingly, we have in his version not only a studied antiquity of phrase in
general, but a glossary including such strange terms as "gramsome " (direful), "
mote " (assembly), " skirl " (to cry shrilly), " bulkin " (calf), and " bragly " (proudly
fine) ...
10
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser
Seest not thilke 1 same hawthorne studde,2 How bragly 3 it begins to budde, And
utter4 his tender head? 15 Flora nowe calleth forth eche flower, And bids make
readie Maias bower, That newe is upryst5 from bedd: Thou shall wee sporten in ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1839