Poems by John Skelton
- 1
- 2
A Lawde and Prayse
... [a laude and prayse made for our souereigne lord the kyng ...
My Darling Dear, My Daisy Flower
... Thou blinkard blowboll7, thou wakèst too late ...
To Mistress Margery Wentworth -2
... Benign, courteous, and meek, ...
Go, Piteous Heart
... Yet, and God wold, I wold my payne were easyd ! ...
A Ballad of the Scottsysshe Kyne
... Ye had be better to have busked to Huntley Bankes, ...
Magnificence
... Hic intrat Good hope fugientibus dyspare & myschefe repente good hope surripiat illi gladium & dicat ...
An Elegie on Henry, fourth Erle of Northumberlande
... t Upon the Dolourus Dethe and Muche Lamentable Chaunce of the Most Honorable Erle of Northumberlande ...
The Auncient Acquaintance, Madam, Betwen Vs Twayn
... He rydeth well the horse, but he rydeth better the mare ...
The Book of Phillip Sparrow
... Ad Dominum, cum tribularer, clamavi: ...
To Mistress Isabell Pennell
... With chuck, chuck, chuck, chuck! ...
The Bowge of Courte
... Disceyte. But by that lorde that is one two and thre ...
Knoledge, Acquayntance, Resort, Fauour With Grace
... Though thou withdraw me from her by long dystaunce, ...
Of all nacyons vnder the heuyn
... madly in hys Musykkys mokkyshly made, Agaynste the IXth Musys of polytyke Poems & Poettys matryculat ...
Womanhod Wanton Ye Want
... As well borne as ye full oft-tyme beggys ...
Vppon a Deedmans Hed
... tacyon in Englysh Couenable in sentence Comendable, Lamentable, Lacrymable, Profytable for the soule ...
- 1
- 2