Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British Poets, Band 1R. Bentley, 1847 |
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Seite 8
... ancient Tabard is gone down to a very ordinary house of entertainment . Once it occu- pied , no doubt , the frontage on both sides of its gateway , now it is confined to the right hand ; and although the ancient yard and ancient ...
... ancient Tabard is gone down to a very ordinary house of entertainment . Once it occu- pied , no doubt , the frontage on both sides of its gateway , now it is confined to the right hand ; and although the ancient yard and ancient ...
Seite 9
William Howitt. ancient Tabard are broken up . The frontage , and about half the premises , were once destroyed by fire ; the remainder , occupying the lower end of the court , exists in all its antiquity . The old wooden gallery ...
William Howitt. ancient Tabard are broken up . The frontage , and about half the premises , were once destroyed by fire ; the remainder , occupying the lower end of the court , exists in all its antiquity . The old wooden gallery ...
Seite 13
... ancient family of Spenser ; indeed he says it himself— " At length they all to mery London came ; To mery London , my most kyndly nurse , That to me gave this life's first native sourse , Though from another place I toke my name , An ...
... ancient family of Spenser ; indeed he says it himself— " At length they all to mery London came ; To mery London , my most kyndly nurse , That to me gave this life's first native sourse , Though from another place I toke my name , An ...
Seite 28
... ancient possession and a most affluent nature . At the foot of the precipice under the house , laurels and filberts , which must have been planted long ago , and probably by Spenser himself , had attained the most enormous size ; the ...
... ancient possession and a most affluent nature . At the foot of the precipice under the house , laurels and filberts , which must have been planted long ago , and probably by Spenser himself , had attained the most enormous size ; the ...
Seite 30
... ancient castle , which they called Castle Pook . On a hill , nearer Doneraile westward , are also the ruins of an abbey ; so that , probably , in Spenser's time , this scene might be well wooded ; these places inhabited by families of ...
... ancient castle , which they called Castle Pook . On a hill , nearer Doneraile westward , are also the ruins of an abbey ; so that , probably , in Spenser's time , this scene might be well wooded ; these places inhabited by families of ...
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Addison afterwards Allan Cunningham amid amongst ancient appears Ballater Ballymahon beautiful Burns Burns's Byron called castle character Chatterton Chaucer church Colston's school cottage Cowper daughter death descendants Dryden Earl England Faerie Queene fame father feeling friends garden genius glorious Goldsmith ground hand haunts heart hills honour Hudibras Ireland James Thomson Johnson Kilkenny Lady letters literary lived lodgings London look Lord Lord Byron marriage married meadows ment miles Milton mind monument mother nature never noble Oliver Goldsmith once poem poet poet's poetical poetry poor Pope present Queen residence river Robert Burns says scene seems Shakspeare Shanter Shelley side Sir William Sir William Stanhope soul Spenser spirit spot stands Swift things Thomas Chatterton Thomson Tighe tion took tower town trees Twickenham village walk wall whole wife William Canynge woods wrote