10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «OBLIQUID»
Descubre el uso de
obliquid en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
obliquid y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser
Onely the starrie skie doth still remaine : Yet do the starres and signes therein still
move, 1 Cranks, windings. 4 Obliquid, oblique. * Misfare, misfortune. 6 Clerkes,
learned men. 3 Comment, feign, pretend. And even itself is mov'd, as wizards ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1839
2
Faerie queene. book VI. Two cantos of mutabilitie. ...
Onely the starrie skie doth still remaine : Yet do the starres and signes therein still
move, 1 Cranks, windings. 4 Obliquid, oblique. 2 Misfare, misfortune. 5 Clerkes,
learned men. 3 Comment, feign, pretend. And even itself is mov'd, as wizards ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, Philip Masterman, 1845
That ye here worke, doth many changes take, And your owne natures change :
for each of you, That vertue have or this or that to make, Is checkt and changed
from his nature trew, By others opposition or obliquid l view. 65 " Besides, the ...
4
Faerie queene. book VI. Two cantos of mutabilitie. ...
Onely the starrie skie doth still remaine: Yet do the starres and signes therein still
move, And even itself is mov'd, as wizards saine1 : But. I Cranks, windings. 2
Misfare, misfortune. 3 Comment, feign, pretend. 4 Obliquid, oblique. 5 Clerkes ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1845
Onely the starrie skie doth still remains : Yet do the starres and signes therein still
move, 1 Cranks, windings. * Misfare, misfortune. * Comment, feign, pretend. 4
Obliquid, oblique. • Clerkes, learned n And even itself is mov'd, as wizards same
1 ...
Edmund Spenser, George Stillman Hillard, 1857
6
Sixteenth-Century Poetry: An Annotated Anthology
54.6–9 An argument from astrology: the influence ofa particular planet on earthly
events is affected by the position of other planets, whether they are directly
opposite in the sky (“opposition”) or at some oblique angle (“obliquid” – the
misfare ...
7
The Poetical Works of Edmund Spenser in Five Volumes
... which ye spake, That ye here worke, doth many changes take, And your owne
natures change: for each of you, That vertue have or this or that to make, Is checkt
and changed from his nature trew, By others opposition or obliquid view.
8
Spenser: The Faerie Queene
6–9 The power and influence (vertue) of a planet is affected by its position
relative to the other planets, being either opposite (and then checkt) or oblique (
and then changed). obliquid is a S. coinage used only here. Stanza 55 2 clerkes:
...
9
Edmund Spenser: a selection of his works
(4) which ye spake: which you were talking about; (7) or this, or that to make: to
perform this or that; (9) obliquid view: i.e., obliquity of view. (2) as clerkes faine: as
scholars imagine (or, just possibly) delight in; (5) still: without motion; (6) still: ...
Edmund Spenser, Ian C. Sowton, 1968
10
Select Works of the British Poets, from Chaucer to Jonson, ...
... That vertue have or this or that to make, Ia checkt and changed from his nature
trew, By others opposition or obliquid view. " Besides, the sundry motions of your
spheares, So sundry waies and fashions as clerkes faine, Some in short space, ...
Robert Southey, Fulke Greville (Baron Brooke), Stephen Hawes, 1831