10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «MISDESERT»
Discover the use of
misdesert in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
misdesert and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Faerie Queene, Book Six and the Mutabilitie Cantos:
To whom he answerd thus; “My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert,5 But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and
my young hope subvert, Ere that I in her guilefull traines6 was well expert. 13 “
Not farre ...
Edmund Spenser, Abraham Stoll, Andrew Hadfield, 2007
2
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser
To whom he answered thus ; " My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert, But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and my
young hope subvert, Ere that I in her guilefull traines was well expert. XIII.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1839
3
Animadversions upon a treatise intitled "Gods love to mankind"
_ Now to come to the Non-elect : In their Preterition or negative Reprobation
there is no decree involved of damning any man upon Gods alone will and
pleasure, but onely upon the guilt and misdesert of the persons, whom the
decree of ...
Johannes (Sarisberiensis.), 1641
4
Richard Hooker, Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity
So that although there may be through misdesert degradation as there may be
cause of just separation after matrimony; yet if (as sometimes it does) restitution
to former dignity or reconciliation after breach do happen, neither does the one
nor ...
5
The poetical works of Edmund Spenser ... from the text of J. ...
ToOwhom he answered thus; “ My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert, But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and my
young hope subvert, Ere that I in her guilefull traines was well expert. 11r,1r.
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
To whom he answered thus ; " My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert, But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and my
young hope subvert, Ere that I in her guilefull traines was well expert. XIII.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
7
The Faery queene, book V-VI
To whom he answered thus; “ My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert, But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and my
young hope subvert, Ere thatl in her guilefull traines was well expert. xnr. “ Not
farre ...
Edmund Spenser, John Aikin, 1810
8
The Canterbury tales and Faerie queene, with other poems of ...
Not through misdesert, but through misfortune, the squire replied : l Nobility of
spirit. s Also, s Esteem. 4 Qualities. s Disgrace, abase. s Falsehood. "Not far from
hence, upon yon rocky hill, Hard by a strait there stands a castle strong, Which
doth ...
Geoffrey Chaucer, David Laing Purves, Edmund Spenser, 1870
9
The faerie queene. Books 4-6
To whom he answered thus; “ My haplesse case Is not occasiond through my
misdesert, . But through misfortune, which did me abase Unto this shame, and my
young hope subvert, Ere that I in her guilefull traines was well expert. xm, .
Edmund Spenser, William Pickering, 1825
10
The Works of Mr. Richard Hooker;: With a General Index: ...
So that although there may be through misdesert degradation, as there may be
cause of just separation after Matrimony; m»«. yet if (as sometimes it doth)
restitution to former dignity, or reconciliation after breach, doth happen, neither
doth the ...
Richard Hooker, Izaak Walton, William Stephen Dobson, 1825