Bishop Percy's Folio Manuscript: Loose and Humorous Songs, Volume 4N. Trübner, 1867 - 127 pages |
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Results 6-10 of 13
Page 32
... soone , " the burden of the present ballad : ( " Pop . Music , " v . 2. p . 771 ) . At v . 1. p . 143 the tune is given ; it is to be played cheerfully . " The earlier title of the tune seems to have soon disappeared ; for , says Mr ...
... soone , " the burden of the present ballad : ( " Pop . Music , " v . 2. p . 771 ) . At v . 1. p . 143 the tune is given ; it is to be played cheerfully . " The earlier title of the tune seems to have soon disappeared ; for , says Mr ...
Page 33
... soone . " But in vayne shee did coniure him " Go away . " to depart her presence soe , hauing thousand tounges to allure him , 12 & but one to say him noe . where lipps invite , & eyes delyght , 16 & cheekes as red as rose in Iune ...
... soone . " But in vayne shee did coniure him " Go away . " to depart her presence soe , hauing thousand tounges to allure him , 12 & but one to say him noe . where lipps invite , & eyes delyght , 16 & cheekes as red as rose in Iune ...
Page 34
... songe . did shee consent or he relent ? accepts he night , or grants shee none ? left hee her Mayd or not ? shee sayd " forgoe me now , come to me soone . " 1 tongues . - P . Off a Puritane . [ Page 182 of MS . 34 DULCINA .
... songe . did shee consent or he relent ? accepts he night , or grants shee none ? left hee her Mayd or not ? shee sayd " forgoe me now , come to me soone . " 1 tongues . - P . Off a Puritane . [ Page 182 of MS . 34 DULCINA .
Page 40
... soone 17 he spyed the Baude & Bacon 18 by which you may know 19 the devill is a wencher . 20 1 to his hole in the & c . - P . And bade him in.-W. ( or Works , ed . Procter , after Gifford . ) 2 coached . - P . 4 poached . - P . 6 ...
... soone 17 he spyed the Baude & Bacon 18 by which you may know 19 the devill is a wencher . 20 1 to his hole in the & c . - P . And bade him in.-W. ( or Works , ed . Procter , after Gifford . ) 2 coached . - P . 4 poached . - P . 6 ...
Page 64
... soone espyed , & tooke the same to be his wiues sweet face . Frumenty or Furmety , a kind of Potage made of prepared Wheat , Milk , Sugar , Spice , & c . Phillipps . " Still a favorite dish in the north , consisting of [ page 240 ] ...
... soone espyed , & tooke the same to be his wiues sweet face . Frumenty or Furmety , a kind of Potage made of prepared Wheat , Milk , Sugar , Spice , & c . Phillipps . " Still a favorite dish in the north , consisting of [ page 240 ] ...
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Common terms and phrases
BALLADS and ROMANCES belly BOKES Cambridge cannott Cock Lorell codlings Colchester Castle cold copy Cupid dad ont dance delight devill doth Dulcina edited euery F. J. Furnivall father ffinis ffins ffor ffrom ffull FITZEDWARD HALL FLORIS AND BLANCHEFLOUR Folio frere.-P friar fryar fryer furmitree gaue ging &c giue Grandam boy hart hath haue heere hey &c heyda heye HUMOROUS SONGS Iacke Jack Jonson's kisse leaue lett Lillumwham &c litle liue LOOSE and HUMOROUS loue louers maid Masques mayd meate melio shance merry neuer night Officiall Panche Percy Folio Percy's Phillips.-F PIERS PLOWMAN pipe pleasure Poems printed quoth shee sate sayd shee cryes shee wold shold stanza sweet take heede &c tell thee thou Tom Longe tune vnder vnto vpon W. W. Skeat wench Wheatley wiffe woman yett
Popular passages
Page 39 - After him succeeded, by the general council, one Cock Lorrell, the most notorious knave that ever lived.' . . By trade he was a tinker, often carrying a pan and hammer for shew ; but when he came to a good booty, he would cast his profession into a ditch, and play the padder.
Page 77 - We weare more fantastical fashions than any nation under the sun doth, the French only excepted ; which hath given occasion to the Venetian, and other Italians, to brand the Englishman with a notable mark of levity, by painting him stark naked, with a pair of shears in his hand, making his fashion of attire according to the vain conception of his brain-sick head, not to comeliness and decorum.
Page 32 - Psalmes, or Songs of Sion, turned into the language, and set to the tunes of a strange land...