10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «SEEMELESSE»
Discover the use of
seemelesse in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
seemelesse and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser: With a Memoir
... could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an heape of
gold: thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array,2 Withouten pitty
of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse a plight did rew.
Edmund Spenser, Francis James Child, 1866
... At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an heape of gold : thence
he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array,2 Withouten pitty of her
goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse 8 plight did rew. 86 Yet for no
pitty ...
3
Edmund Spenser's 'The Faerie Queene': A Reading Guide
Thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array, Withouten pitty of her
goodly hew, That Artegall him selfe her seemelesse plight did rew. 26 Yet for no
pitty would he change the course Of lustice, which in Talus hand did lye, Who ...
4
The works of Edmund Spenser, with notes by H.J. Todd
... wisely could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an
heape of gold : thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array
Withouten pitty of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse plight
did \ rew.
Edmund Spenser, Henry John Todd, 1805
5
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser in Five Volumes
... could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an heape of
gold: thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array Withouten pitty
of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse -plight did rew. xxvr.
Edmund Spenser, William Pickering, 1825
6
Spenser: The Faerie Queene
Thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array, Withouten pitty of her
goodly hew, That Artegall him selfe her seemelesse plight did rew. 26 Yet for no
pitty would he change the course Of Iustice, which in Talus hand did lye; Who ...
7
The Faerie queene: disposed into twelve bookes fashioning ...
... wisely could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an
heape of gold : thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array
Withouten pitty of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse plight
did row.
8
A Companion to English Renaissance Literature and Culture
Just before, her plight has been described as 'seemelesse': 'unseemly', 'seamless
', 'unseeming', or real; this single word summarizes the inseparability of her plight
into human and abstract parts – parts of flesh and parts of theory (ii.25, 27).
9
Faerie queene. book III-V
... could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an heape of
gold: thence be her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array Withouten pitty
of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse' plight did rew.3 XXVI.
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1842
10
Select Works of the British Poets, from Chaucer to Jonson, ...
... wisely could bewray, At length found out whereas she hidden lay Under an,
heape of gold: thence he her drew By the faire lockes, and fowly did array
Withouten pitty of her goodly hew, That Artegall himselfe her seemelesse plight
did rew.
Robert Southey, Fulke Greville (Baron Brooke), Stephen Hawes, 1831