10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «GOODLIHEAD»
Discover the use of
goodlihead in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
goodlihead and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
English Renaissance Poetry: a Collection of Shorter Poems ...
John Edward Williams. (May all full well it try!), But off will ye cast At any blast,
That am your man. TO MISTRESS MARGERY WENTWORTH With marjoram
gentle, The flower of goodlihead, Embroidered the mantle Is of your maidenhead.
John Edward Williams, 1990
2
Jane Seymour: Henry VIII's True Love
Accordingto Skeltonin 'To Mistress Margery Wentworth': With margerain gentle,
Theflower of goodlihead, Embroideredthe mantle Is of your maidenhead. Plainly I
cannot glose; Ye be, as I devine, The pretty primrose, The goodly columbine.
3
The Works of the British Poets: With Prefaces, Biographical ...
Sure honour in his visage chose her dwelling, And sacred tru'h, ' pt-tdic. adornc
his face; Such goodlihead and humblenesznevex was. Blcsl be the sight L full
well whose luuks l kenn, W'here jnyaunce sits and ever smiling grace; Fredcrick !
Robert Anderson, Henry Howard Earl of Surrey, Thomas Sackville Earl of Dorset, 1795
4
A Complete Edition of the Poets of Great Britain: Containing ...
Sure honour in his visage chose her dwelling, And sacred truth, ' perdie, adorns
his sace; Such goodlihead and humbleness never was. Blesl be the-sight f sull
well whose looks llltcnu, Where ioyaunce fits and evensmiling grace; Prederick!
5
Collected English Verse
1529) TO MISTRESS MARGERY WENTWORTH With margerain1 gentle, The
flower of goodlihead, Embroidered the mantle Is of your maidenhead. Plainly I
cannot glose, Ye be as I divine The pretty primrose, The goodly columbine.
marjoram.
6
The Works of Edmund Spenser
265 I am a poore (heepe, albe my colour donne, For with long travaile I am brent
in the sonne ; And if that, my grandfire me fayd, be true, Sicker, I am very lybbe to
you ; So be your goodlihead do not disdaine 27» The base kinred of so limple ...
Edmund Spenser, Henry John Todd, 1805
7
A complete edition of the poets of Great Britain...Robert ...
I am a poor sheep, albc my colour dun, " For with longer travel I am brent in the
fun ; " And if that my grandsiie me laid to be true, " Siker I am very lybbc to you, "
So be your goodlihead do not disdain *' The base kindred of so simple swain.
8
The Poetical Calendar, Containing a Collection of Scarce and ...
So far as doth the harbinger of day The lesser lamps of night in (1) sheen excell ;
So far in sweetness and in beauty May Above all other months doth bear the bell
: So far as May doth other months exceed, So far in virtue and in (m) goodlihead ...
Francis Fawkes, William Woty, 1763
9
Sixteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology
40 Daughter (said she), what need ye be dismayed, Or why make ye such
monster of your mind? Of much more uncouth thing I was afraid, 37.9 launchèd
cut. 38.8 goodlihead beauty. Of filthy lust contrary unto kind, But this affection
nothing.
10
The Riches of Chaucer: In which His Impurities Have Been ...
So goodly speak and so friendely, That certes I trow that evermore 365 N' as 7
seen so blissful a treasure : — 1 Goodlihead— goodness. * Besey— beseen. 3
Hallows— saints. * Boon petition. 5 Soth — truth. 6 Every deal — wholly, in every
...
Geoffrey Chaucer, Charles Cowden Clarke, 1835