Politics and Poetry in the Fifteenth CenturyBarnes & Noble, 1972 - 415 pages |
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Page 81
... kepe oure kynge from all myscheve ' ( RL XV , 130 , 68 ) or to ensure more particularly that ' In enemyes fortune ... he never falle ' ( 31 ) , and the Latin refrain ' Salvum fac regem domine ' reiterates the same point . The poem is ...
... kepe oure kynge from all myscheve ' ( RL XV , 130 , 68 ) or to ensure more particularly that ' In enemyes fortune ... he never falle ' ( 31 ) , and the Latin refrain ' Salvum fac regem domine ' reiterates the same point . The poem is ...
Page 92
... Kepe these too townes sure to your mageste As youre tweyne eyne to kepe the narowe see . ' ( 20-1 ) He recalls at length how Henry V had built great ships : The Trinite , the Grace Dieu , the Holy Goste And other moo , whiche as now be ...
... Kepe these too townes sure to your mageste As youre tweyne eyne to kepe the narowe see . ' ( 20-1 ) He recalls at length how Henry V had built great ships : The Trinite , the Grace Dieu , the Holy Goste And other moo , whiche as now be ...
Page 160
... kepe— That is Talbot oure goode dogge . ( PPS , II , 222 ) Another poem , perhaps written in the early months of 1450 and mainly concerned with attacking William Booth , Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield , also expresses misgivings about ...
... kepe— That is Talbot oure goode dogge . ( PPS , II , 222 ) Another poem , perhaps written in the early months of 1450 and mainly concerned with attacking William Booth , Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield , also expresses misgivings about ...
Table des matières
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS | 6 |
POLITICAL VERSE IN MEDIEVAL ENGLAND | 13 |
NATIONALISM AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS | 35 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
advice allowed appears battle Book Calais cause Chronicle Church claim classes clergy common complaints contemporary continues Council criticism crown death Duke Earl early Edward EETS England English example fact fifteenth century forces France French frequently friars give gret grete hath haue Henry Hoccleve Humphrey important interest John King King's kyng Lancastrian land later less lines Lollards London lord lost Lydgate March means Medieval merchants moral Oxford particularly peace perhaps poem poet political political verse popular position Prince prophecy refers rich Richard Robin Hood rule says seems situation social society songs stanza story stresses success Suffolk ther Thomas trade usually various verses Warwick writers written York Yorkist þat þei