| Charles Knight - 1868 - 578 pages
...then at the virginals ; ye know nothing comes amiss to me ; then carol I up 126 LOVE S LABOUK S K58T. a song withal, that by and by they come flocking about...and ever they cry, 'Another, good Laneham, another.' " Before the end of Navarre's first interview with the Princess, Boyet has discovered that he is "... | |
| Charles Knight - 1868 - 570 pages
...with my gittern and else with my cittern ; then at the virginals ; ye know nothing comes amiss to me ; then carol I up a song withal, that by and by they come flocking about me like bees to honey, aud ever they cry, 'Another, good Laneham, another.' " Before the end of Navarre's first interview... | |
| George Adlard - 1870 - 402 pages
...my gittern, or else with my cittern, then at the virginals i1 You know nothing comes amiss to me : Then carol I up a song withal ; that by and by they...bees to honey ; And ever they cry, "Another, good Lansiham, another!" Shall I tell you ? when I BOO Mistre.ua (Ah ! see a mad knave ; I had almost told... | |
| Henry Richard Fox Bourne - Chivalry - 1891 - 668 pages
...cithern, then at the virginals — ye know nothing comes amiss to me. Then carol I up a song withal ; then by and by they come flocking about me like bees to honey ; and ever they cry, ' Another, good Langham, another ! ' And to say truth, what with mine eyes, as I can amorously gloat it, with my Spanish... | |
| Sabine Baring-Gould - History - 1892 - 316 pages
...with my gittern, and else with my cittern, then at the virginals (ye know nothing comes amiss to me) ; then carol I up a song withal ; that by and by they...and ever they cry, ' Another, good Laneham, another ! ' " In the great agitation of minds caused by the Reformation, the itinerant minstrels were an element... | |
| Sidney Lanier - English poetry - 1902 - 472 pages
...with my gittern, or else with my cittern, then at the virginals ; you know nothing comes amiss to me. Then carol I up a song withal ; that by and by they...mad knave ; I had almost told all !) that she gives me once but an eye or an ear ; why, then, man am I blest ; my grace, my courage, my cunning is doubled... | |
| Percy Addleshaw - 1909 - 482 pages
...cithern, then at the virginals — ye know nothing comes amiss to me. Then carol I up a song withal ; then by and by they come flocking about me like bees to honey ; and ever they cry, ' Another, good Langham, another 1 ' And to say truth, what with mine eyes, as I can amorously gloat it, with my Spanish... | |
| Robert Burns Morgan - Great Britain - 1923 - 696 pages
...Virginals 3 — ye know nothing comes amiss to me — then carol I up a song withal, that by and bye they come flocking about me like bees to honey : and ever they cry, " Another, good Laneham, another ! " . . . By my truth, countryman, it is sometime by midnight ere I can get from them. And thus have... | |
| Marion Bauer - Music - 1925 - 674 pages
...at the virginals (ye know nothing comes amiss to me); then carol I up a song withal; that by-and-by they come flocking about me like bees to honey; and ever they cry, 'Another, good Laneham, another! '" (From The Story of Minstrelsy by Edmundstoune Duncan.) .v SHAKESPEARE AND Mus1c This was the day... | |
| Marion Bauer, Ethel Rose Peyser - Music - 1925 - 678 pages
...at the virginals (ye know nothing comes amiss to me); then carol I up a song withal; that by-and-by they come flocking about me like bees to honey; and...ever they cry, ' Another, good Laneham, another!'" (From The Story of Minstrelsy by Edmundstoune Duncan.) SHAKESPEARE AND Music This was the day in which... | |
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