1605 - Breton, Nicholas - Poste with Mad Packet of Letters (pt 2) (3): Difference between revisions
From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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HOw beauty will make a Foole proud, I would your plaister worke did not witnesse: but had you wit to helpe wickednesse, you would put a Parrat out of countenance: your countenance is made after your conceit, as full of merrie tricks as a Monkey: and for your foot-pace, I thinke you haue sore héeles, you walke so nicely, as vpon egge-shels: your haire is none of your owne, and for your stéeple tire, it is like the gaud of a <keyword>Maid-Marion</keyword>, so that had you a foole by the hand, you might walke where you would in a <keyword>Moris-dance</keyword>: Oh fine come to it, how it fiddles like a Hackny that would tire at halfe a mile.<ref>{{:Breton, Nicholas 1879a}}, vol. II, p. 41.</ref>}}</onlyinclude> | HOw beauty will make a Foole proud, I would your plaister worke did not witnesse: but had you wit to helpe wickednesse, you would put a Parrat out of countenance: your countenance is made after your conceit, as full of merrie tricks as a Monkey: and for your foot-pace, I thinke you haue sore héeles, you walke so nicely, as vpon egge-shels: your haire is none of your owne, and for your stéeple tire, it is like the gaud of a <keyword>Maid-Marion</keyword>, so that had you a foole by the hand, you might walke where you would in a <keyword>Moris-dance</keyword>: Oh fine come to it, how it fiddles like a Hackny that would tire at halfe a mile.<ref>{{:Breton, Nicholas 1879a}}, vol. II, p. 41.</ref>}}</onlyinclude> | ||
== Lists == | |||
* Not included in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 315-19. | * Not included in {{:Dobson, Richard Barrie 1976a}}, pp. 315-19. | ||
* Outside scope of {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}. | * Outside scope of {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}. |
Revision as of 12:48, 28 July 2018
By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-08-02. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-07-28.
Allusion
28. A Letter to a proud Mistresse.
HOw beauty will make a Foole proud, I would your plaister worke did not witnesse: but had you wit to helpe wickednesse, you would put a Parrat out of countenance: your countenance is made after your conceit, as full of merrie tricks as a Monkey: and for your foot-pace, I thinke you haue sore héeles, you walke so nicely, as vpon egge-shels: your haire is none of your owne, and for your stéeple tire, it is like the gaud of a Maid-Marion, so that had you a foole by the hand, you might walke where you would in a Moris-dance: Oh fine come to it, how it fiddles like a Hackny that would tire at halfe a mile.[1]
Lists
- Not included in Dobson, R. B., ed.; Taylor, J., ed. Rymes of Robyn Hood: an Introduction to the English Outlaw (London, 1976), pp. 315-19.
- Outside scope of Sussex, Lucy, compil. 'References to Robin Hood up to 1600', in: Knight, Stephen. Robin Hood: A Complete Study of the English Outlaw (Oxford, UK; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Blackwell, 1994), pp. 262-88.
Sources
Notes