| Robert Southey - 1847 - 722 pages
...wonders precyous; But the extent of it is more gracyous, And swete to here awaye. The story sayth, Man, in the begynnynge Loke well and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay. God (the Son) speaketh at the opening of the piece, and saying that the more He forbears the... | |
| Karl Goedeke - 1865 - 266 pages
...Wirkt nach voll Süßigkeit. The ftory fayth, — Man in the begynnynge Loke well, and take goodheed to the endynge, Be you never fo gay: Ye thynke fynne...the ende caufeth the foule to wepe, Whan the body lyvcth in claye. Her fhall you fe how Felawfhip, and Jolyte, Bothe Strengthe, Pleafure, and Beaute,... | |
| Alfred William Pollard - 1890 - 324 pages
...entent of it is more gracyous And swete to here awaye. The story sayth : man, in the begynnynge 10 Loke well and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay, Ye thynke synne in the begynnynge full swete, Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe,... | |
| Alfred William Pollard - 1895 - 324 pages
...wonders precyous, But the entent of it is more gracyous And swete to here awaye. The story sayth : man, in the begynnynge Loke well and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay, Ye thynke synne in the begynnynge full swete, Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe,... | |
| 1903 - 50 pages
...entent of it is more gracyous, And swete to here awaye. The story sayth — Man, in the begynnynge 10 Loke well, and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay : Ye thynke sinne in the begynnynge full swete, Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe,/... | |
| Walter Wilson Greg - 1904 - 58 pages
...is wonders precyous But the entent of it is more gracyous And swete to here awaye 10 The story sayth man in the begynnynge Loke well and take good heed to the endynge Be you neuer so gay Ye thynke synne in the begynnynge full swete Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe... | |
| Walter Cochrane Bronson - 1910 - 448 pages
...entent of it is more gracyous And swete to here awaye. The story sayth, "Man, in the begynnynge 10 Loke well and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay; Ye thynke synne in the begynnynge full swete, Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe,... | |
| J. B. Steane, J. B.. Steane, Steane J B - 1964 - 396 pages
...calls with a roaring voice. But the admonitions of Everyman are those of Faustus: The story sayth: man, in the begynnynge Loke well and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay. And in both plays, a man's soul is the stage; the forces from without correspond to forces... | |
| Ann Sullivan Haskell - 1985 - 556 pages
...of it is more gracyous serious And swete to bere awaye. The story sayth: man, in the begynnynge 10 Loke well, and take good heed to the endynge, Be you never so gay. Ye thynke synne in the begynnynge full swete, Whiche in the ende causeth the soule to wepe... | |
| Inessa Medzhibovskaya - 2008 - 451 pages
...However, this imagery strikes deep to the very core of Ivan's pageant with death: "The story sayth: Man, in the begynnynge / Loke well, and take good heed to the endynge, / Be you never so gay!"78 It is on the tension of the transcendental psychology of the hero and on the presumption... | |
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