- Ingleby, C. M.; Smith, Lucy
Toulmin (1874). Shakespeare's
centurie of
prayse (2 ed.). London: Trübner & Co. pp. 409–410. OCLC 690802639. Stern, Tiffany...
-
completion with the inscription: "If
stones could speake, then London's
prayse should sound, Who
built this
church and
cittie from the grounde." During...
-
virtuous lyff he dyd excell. He serv'd long tyme in
chappel with
grete prayse Fower sovereygnes reygnes (a
thing not
often seen); I
meane Kyng
Henry and...
- Marston's "Pigmalion", in "The
Argument of the Poem" and "The
Authour in
prayse of his
precedent Poem" (1598) John Dryden's poem "Pygmalion and the Statue"...
- (Autumn 2000): 328-348. S. P. Cerasano. and
Steven W. May., eds. In the
Prayse of
Writing Early Modern M****cript Studies :
Essays in
Honour of
Peter Beal...
- mine
Oaten reeds, And sing of
Knights and
Ladies gentle deeds; Whose
prayses having slept in
silence long, Me, all too meane, the
sacred Muse areeds...
-
Phillis of
Thomas Lodge.
Grosart also
prints a
prose tract entitled The
Prayse of
Nothing (1585). The Sixe
Idillia from Theocritus,
reckoned by John Payne...
- further. In the
porch is an inscription: If
stones could speake then London's
prayse should sound who
built this
church and
cittie from the grounde.
After its...
-
Edward Dyer was the
first to
explicitly mention Les
songes in his book The
prayse of nothing, and the
first masque to
include a
reference to the
images was...
-
towne of
Louthe deshirying to have a good payr of organs, to the laude,
prayse and
honour of God, and the Hole, Holy Co’pany of heffen, made an ****emble...