| Edmund Spenser - 1921 - 826 pages
...Inflicts with dint of sword, so sore doth light, As doth the poysnous sting, which infamy [jnfixeth in the name of noble wight : For by no art, nor any leaches might It euer can recured be againe ; Ne all the skill, which that immortall spright Of Podalyrius did in it... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1926 - 496 pages
...Squire and dame Of their sore maladies : He Turpine doth defeate, and shame For his late villanies. I. No wound, which warlike hand of enemy Inflicts with...nor any leaches might, It ever can recured be againe ; Ne all the skill, which that immortall spright Of Podalyrius did in it retaine, Can remedy such hurts... | |
| Geoffrey H. Hartman, Professor Geoffrey H Hartman - Literary Criticism - 1999 - 348 pages
...should be adduced; not being a clinician, I shall fall back on literary examples. NAMES AND WOUNDS No wound, which warlike hand of enemy Inflicts with...which infamy Infixeth in the name of noble wight. I So Spenser, in the sixth book of The Faerie Queene, alluding to the wound inflicted by the Blatant... | |
| 1862 - 516 pages
...claim or afford exemption. If not guilty, then woe worth the damning brand of ineffaceable slander. For No wound, which warlike hand of enemy Inflicts with dint of sword, so sore doth light As doth the poisonous sting;, which infamy Infixeth in the name of noble wight : For, by no art nor any leach's... | |
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