11) 62. Rosaline. Thomas Lodge. 1909-14. English Poetry I: From Chaucer to
Gray. The Harvard Classics ...Heigh ho, fair Rosaline! 5 Her eyes are sapphires set in snow Resembling heaven by every wink; The Gods do fear whenas they glow, And I do tremble when I think Heigh... 12) 63. Phillis. Thomas Lodge. 1909-14. English Poetry I: From Chaucer to Gray.
The Harvard Classics ...And if I kiss he stingeth me. Love in thine eyes doth build his bower, 5 And sleeps within their pretty shine; And if I look the boy will lower, And from their orbs... 13) 100. Rosaline. Thomas Lodge. The Oxford Book of English Verse ...Heigh ho, fair Rosaline! 5 Her eyes are sapphires set in snow, Resembling heaven by every wink; The gods do fear whenas they glow, And I do tremble when I think Heigh... 14) 99. Phillis 2. Thomas Lodge. The Oxford Book of English Verse ...And if I kiss he stingeth me. Love in thine eyes doth build his bower, 5 And sleeps within their pretty shine; And if I look the boy will lower, And from their orbs... 15) 98. Phillis 1. Thomas Lodge. The Oxford Book of English Verse ...Her risings still to honour. My Phillis hath prime-feather'd flowers, 5 That smile when she treads on them; And Phillis hath a gallant flock, That leaps since she... 16) §4. "The Phoenix Nest;" Nicholas Breton; Thomas Lodge. VI. The Song-Books
and Miscellanies. Vol. 4. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael
Drayton. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...in a different guise; but, in The Phoenix Nest, the new note is struck most forcibly by Thomas Lodge. The fifteen poems by that author which the volume includes are... 17) 61. Rosalind's Madrigal. Thomas Lodge. 1909-14. English Poetry I: From
Chaucer to Gray. The Harvard Classics ...LOVE in my bosom like a bee Doth suck his sweet: Now with his wings he plays with me, Now with his feet. Within mine eyes he makes his nest, 5 His bed amidst my tender... 18) 97. Rosalind's Madrigal. Thomas Lodge. The Oxford Book of English Verse ...LOVE in my bosom like a bee Doth suck his sweet: Now with his wings he plays with me, Now with his feet. Within mine eyes he makes his nest, 5 His bed amidst my tender... 19) Brewer, E. Cobham. Dictionary of Phrase & Fable. Lodge, Thomas ...Wit s Miserie and the World s Madnesse (1596); and others. See Hazlitt s Handbook to Early English Literature, Collier s Dramatic Poetry and Poetical Decameron, Wood... 20) §11. Lodge. XII. The Elizabethan Sonnet. Vol. 3. Renascence and
Reformation. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An
Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...Thomas Lodge, whose sonnet-sequence Phillis appeared in 1593, improves on Daniel s example as a borrower of foreign work. In fact, he merits the first place among... |