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Specimens of English literature from the 'Ploughmans crede' to the ...

Specimens of English literature from the 'Ploughmans crede' to the ...

Specimens of English literature from the 'Ploughmans crede' to the ...

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;;:152 XIV. JOHN SKELTON.But where<strong>to</strong> shulde I note 1145How <strong>of</strong>ten dyd I <strong>to</strong>teVpon her prety fote ?It raysed myne hert roteTo se her treade <strong>the</strong> groundeWith heles short and rounde. 1150She is playnly expresseEgeria, <strong>the</strong> goddesse,And lyke <strong>to</strong> her image,Emportured with corage,A louers pylgrimageTher is no beest sauage,Ne no tyger so wood,But she wolde chaunge his mood,Such relucent graceIs formed in her faceFor this most goodly floure,This blossome <strong>of</strong> fresshe coloure,So Jupiter me succour,She flour}-ssheth new and newIn beaute and vertewI/ac claritaie geminagJoriosa fceviina,Mirabilia testimonia tua !Sicut novellce plantationes in juventute sua.115511601 165So goodly as she dresses, 1 170So properly ^ she pressesThe bryght golden tressesOf her heer so fyne,Lyke Phebus beames shyne.Where<strong>to</strong> shuld I discloseThe garterynge <strong>of</strong> her hose ?/o' So in o<strong>the</strong>r eds, ; Kele's ed. has ' propeeyly.'

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