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All About History Books

The Chronicle of Geoffrey le Baker of Swinbroke. Baker was a secular clerk from Swinbroke, now Swinbrook, an Oxfordshire village two miles east of Burford. His Chronicle describes the events of the period 1303-1356: Gaveston, Bannockburn, Boroughbridge, the murder of King Edward II, the Scottish Wars, Sluys, Crécy, the Black Death, Winchelsea and Poitiers. To quote Herbert Bruce 'it possesses a vigorous and characteristic style, and its value for particular events between 1303 and 1356 has been recognised by its editor and by subsequent writers'. The book provides remarkable detail about the events it describes. Baker's text has been augmented with hundreds of notes, including extracts from other contemporary chronicles, such as the Annales Londonienses, Annales Paulini, Murimuth, Lanercost, Avesbury, Guisborough and Froissart to enrich the reader's understanding. The translation takes as its source the 'Chronicon Galfridi le Baker de Swynebroke' published in 1889, edited by Edward Maunde Thompson. Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback.

Tudor Books, The Faerie Queene by Spenser

The Faerie Queene by Spenser is in Tudor Books.

Tudor Books, The Faerie Queene by Spenser, The Faerie Queene Book3 3

The Faerie Queene Book3 3 containing the Legend of Britomartis or Of Chastity.

It falles me here to write of Chastity,

The fayrest vertue, far above the rest:

For which what needes me fetch from Faery

Forreine ensamples it. to have exprest?

Sith it is shrined in my Soveraines brest,

And formd so lively in each perfect part,

That to all Ladies, which have it profest,

Need but behold the pourtraict of her hart;

If pourtrayd it might bee by any living art.

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But living art may not least part expresse,

Nor life-resembling pencill it can paynt:

All were it Zeuxis or Praxiteles,

His dsdale hand would faile and greatly faynt,

And her perfections with his error taynt:

Ne Poets witt, that passeth Painter farre

In picturing the parts of beauty daynt,

So hard a workemanship adventure darre,

For fear, through want of words,

her excellence to marre.

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How then shall I, Apprentice of the skill,

That whylome1 in diuinest wits did raine,

Presume so high to stretch mine humble quill?

Yet now my lucklesse lot doth me constraine

Hereto perforce. But ô dred Soueraine

Thus farre forth pardon, sith that choicest wit

Cannot your glorious pourtraict figure plaine

That I in colourd showes may shadow it,

And antique praises vnto present persons fit.

Note 1. whylome: formerly

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But if in living colours, and right hew,

Your selfe you couet to see pictured,

Who can it doe more liuely, or more trew,

Then that sweet verse, with Nectar sprinckeled,

In which a gracious servant1 pictured

His Cynthia2, his heauens fairest light?

That with his melting sweetnesse rauished,

And with the wonder of her beames bright,

My senses lulled are in slomber of delight.

Note 1. Walter Raleigh.

Note 2. Cynthia: goddess of the moon and chastity, also Diana. Raleigh's poem Cynthia praises Queen Elizabeth's virtues.

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But let that same delitious Poet lend

A little leaue vnto a rusticke Muse

To sing his mistresse prayse, and let him mend,

If ought amis her liking may abuse:

Ne let his fairest Cynthia refuse,

In mirrours more then one her selfe to see,

But either Gloriana1 let her chuse,

Or in Belphoebe2 fashioned to bee:

In th'one her rule, in th'other her rare chastitee.

Note 1. Gloriana: Queen of Faerieland.

Note 2. Belphoebe: a beautiful woman who will be a character in Canto V.

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