|
"unde loquaces Lymphae desiliunt tuae." |
Wakefield quotes As You Like It, ii. 1:
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"As he lay along Under an oak whose antique root peeps out Upon the brook that brawls along this road." |
[105.] Smiling as in scorn. Cf. Shakes. Pass. Pilgrim, 14:
| "Yet at my parting sweetly did she smile, In scorn or friendship, nill I construe whether." |
and Skelton, Prol. to B. of C.:
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"Smylynge half in scorne At our foly." |
[107.] Woeful-wan. Mitford says: "Woeful-wan is not a legitimate compound, and must be divided into two separate words, for such they are, when released from the handcuffs of the hyphen." The hyphen is not in the edition of 1768, and we should omit it if it were not found in the Pembroke MS.
Wakefield quotes Spenser, Shep. Kal. Jan.: