10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CAPRIFOLE»
Discover the use of
caprifole in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
caprifole and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
And in the thickest covert of that shade There was a pleasant arber, not by art But
of the trees owne inclination made, Which knitting their rancke 3 braunches part
to part, With wanton y vie-twine entrayld 4 atlnvart, And eglantine and caprifole 5
...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
With wanton yvie twyne entrayld * athwart, And eglantine and caprifole 2 emong,
Fashiond above within their inmost part,That nether Phoebus beams could
through them throng, Nor Aeolus sharp blast could worke them any wrong. 45
And all ...
3
Spenser: The Faerie Queene
Caprifole: the honeysuckle or woodbine. 8–9 See v 51.4–5n. throng: press.
Aeolus: the wind. Stanza 45 1 euery sort: i.e. every kind or species, which
endures even though the individual flowers cited here die without reproducing
themselves.
4
A glossary and etymological dictionary of obsolete and ...
Caprifole (L. capri folium) , the honeysuckle or woodbine. With wanton ivie twine
entrayled athwart, And eglantine and caprifole among. Sfenser's F. Queen.
Capuccio (It.), a hood, cowl, or capuchin. That at his back a brode capuccio had.
Irid.
5
Bards and blossoms; or, The poetry, history, and ...
The older name, caprifole, is used in speaking of it in the poetry of Spenser and
Shakspere. Why it should have been called caprifole — i.e., goatleaf — by these
older writers and by the great mass of the people is not clear, though it is curious
...
Frederick Edward Hulme, 1877
6
The English Names of Our Commonest Wild Flowers ...
4. fr. Lat. caput, a head, fr. the heads of fl. Capon's Tail Grass— SQUIRRELTAIL
FESCUE. Capparis — Honeysuckle. 4. see Caprifole 4. Caprifole (foy, foley or
foyl>— COMMON HONEYSUCKLE. 4. fr. Lat. Caprifolium, caper, a goat, folium, a
l., ...
7
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
... eglantine and caprifole emong, Fashiond above within their inmost part, That
nether Phoebus beams could through them throng, _ Nor Aeolus sharp blast
could worke them any wrong.
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
8
A Glossary and Etymological Dictionary of Obsolete and ...
THAT Euns Wan. Quoth Hudibras, 'tis a caprich Beyond the infliction of a. witch.
Hummus. CAPRIFOLE (L. caprzfolium), the honeysuckle or woodbine. With
wanton ivie twine entrayled nthwart, And eglantine and caprzjfole among. S-i>
icnsnr\'s ...
9
An Analytical Dictionary of the English Language in which ...
179 ib. 90 2 'Q u t\ _. u. _'_I I-Iv u-Isszsggsfiggfi am. Capreolus Capriccio Caprice
Caprices Caprich Caprichio Capricious Capriciously Capriciousness Capricorn
Capritication Caprificus Caprifole Caprifolium Caprimulgus Caprioles Capriscus
...
David BOOTH (Author of the Analytical Dictionary.), 1835
10
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser
And in the thickest covert of that shade 44 There was a pleasant Arber, not by art
But of the trees owne inclination made, Which knitting their rancke braunches
part to part, With wanton Yvie~twine entrayld athwart, And Eglantine and
Caprifole ...