| Harry Harewood - 1835 - 384 sidor
...Berners, or Barnes, prioress of a nunnery near St. Albans. .' The angler (she observes) atte the leest hath his holsom walk and mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete savoure of the meede fioures that makyth him hungry ; he hereth the -12 melodyous annony of the fowlls,... | |
| 1841 - 282 sidor
...ready to say with an old writer (Lady Juliana Barnes) on his favourite art, that Atte the leest, he hath his holsom walk, and mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete savoure of the meede floures that makyth him hungry ; he hereth the melodyous armony of fowles; he... | |
| Anna Maria Hall - 842 sidor
...— He observcth, if the angler's sport shoulde fail him, " he at yc best hathe his holsoin walk aud mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete savour of yc meade of (lowers, that maketh him hungry ; he hearcth the melodious harmonic of fowles, he sccth... | |
| Anne Manning - 1852 - 200 sidor
...ye full as much as he: He observeth, if the angler's sport shoulde fail him, " he at ye best hathe his holsom walk and mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete savour of ye meade of flowers, that maketh him hungry; he heareth the melodious harmonie of fowles, he seeth... | |
| James Locke - 1860 - 170 sidor
...throw, and their sport is at an end for the day. I succeed in getting two or three beautiful trouts, of half a pound each ; others get glorious nibbles;...flowers that maketh him hungry: he heareth the melodious harmonic of fowles; he seeth the young swans, herons, ducks, cotes, and many other fowles.' I am told,... | |
| Juliana Berners, Piscator (pseud.) - 1885 - 54 sidor
...he dooth as this treatyse techyth ; but yf there be nought in the water. And yet atte the leest he hath his holsom walk and mery at his ease. a swete ayre of the swete sauoure of the meede floures : that makyth hym hungry. He hereth the melodyous armony of fowles. He... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1886 - 596 sidor
...away after that he is take on the hoke, or elles that ho catcho nought . . . and yet atte the leest he hath his holsom walk and mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete sauoure of the meede floures. . . . Thus have I prouyed in myn entent that the dysporto ami game of... | |
| John Harrington Keene - 1886 - 268 sidor
...years since, stands good now in reference to the angler : " The angler atte the leest hath hys holsome walk and mery at his ease, a swete ayre of the swete savoure of the mede floures, that makyth him hungry, he hereth the melodyous armony of fowles, he seeth... | |
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