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Poem
109
Miscellany
40
Related People
Edmund Spenser
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149
Not attributed
41
John Milton
25
William Shakespeare
23
John Dryden
18
Benjamin Jonson
16
Alexander Pope
13
Geoffrey Chaucer
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Jonathan Swift
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Sir Walter Ralegh [Raleigh]
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Virtue / vice
18
Grief / sadness / melancholy
13
Love
12
Death
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Mythology
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Advice / moral precepts
8
Nature
6
High society / the court
4
Hopelessness / vanity of life
4
Poetry / literature / writing
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Poem Genre / Form
Extract / snippet from longer work
89
Spenserian stanzas
40
Allegory
21
Nine-line stanzas
10
Couplet
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Pastoral
5
Alternate rhyme [ababcdcd...]
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Miscellany Genre
Collection of 16th century verse
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Collection of literary verse
7
Collection including prose
6
Collection of ballads
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Collection of songs
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Collection of translations/imitations
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Subscription Miscellany
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Collection of religious verse
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Collection aimed at children/young people
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Collection of 17th century verse
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1794
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81.
The first was fancy like a lovely boy
First Line:
The first was fancy like a lovely boy
Last Line:
Vile poverty and lastly death with infamy
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
13183
82.
The best said he that I can you advise
First Line:
The best said he that I can you advise
Last Line:
So shall you soon repair your present evil plight
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
14492
83.
The noble heart that harbours virtous thought
First Line:
The noble heart that harbours virtous thought
Last Line:
The eternal brood of glory excellent
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
14463
84.
The longer life I wote the greater sin
First Line:
The longer life I wote the greater sin
Last Line:
All which and thousands more do make a loathsome life
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
16092
85.
Then hark ye gentle knights and ladies free
First Line:
Then hark ye gentle knights and ladies free
Last Line:
Yet is the pain thereof much greater than the fee
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
16125
86.
The sight whereof in his congealed flesh
First Line:
The sight whereof in his congealed flesh
Last Line:
The driest wood is soonest burnt to dust
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
15639
87.
There entering in they found the good man self
First Line:
There entering in they found the good man self
Last Line:
Those be unquiet thoughts that careful minds invade
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
13837
88.
There is continual spring and harvest there
First Line:
There is continual spring and harvest there
Last Line:
And their true loves without suspicion tell abroad
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
30768
89.
Through knowledge we behold the world's creation
First Line:
Through knowledge we behold the world's creation
Last Line:
And what to man and what to God we owe
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
16013
90.
Unhappy maid then answered she whose dread
First Line:
Unhappy maid then answered she whose dread
Last Line:
That lives a loathed life and wishing cannot die
Author:
Edmund Spenser (Absolute)
DMI number:
14404
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