Alina P.
04-08-2011, 11:28 AM
Hello everybody!
This is my first message and I wonder if anyone can help me. I'm reading a novel in English and I feel I'm making good progress and understanding the text. However, the author quotes a poem and I can't understand the lines, perhaps because they sound rather 'archaic'. I've tried to find explanations or reading guides for this poem but it is probably not too popular and I haven't had any luck. Could someone provide an explanation or a translation into modern English, so that I can understand what it is about?
It is a fragment of 'The Shepheardes Calender' by Edmund Spenser:
Cvddie, for shame hold vp thy heauye head,
And let vs cast with what delight to chace:
And weary thys long lingring Phoebus race.
Whilome thou wont the shepheards laddes to leade,
In rymes, in ridles, and in bydding base:
Now they in thee, and thou in sleepe art dead?
Thank you in advance.
Alina
This is my first message and I wonder if anyone can help me. I'm reading a novel in English and I feel I'm making good progress and understanding the text. However, the author quotes a poem and I can't understand the lines, perhaps because they sound rather 'archaic'. I've tried to find explanations or reading guides for this poem but it is probably not too popular and I haven't had any luck. Could someone provide an explanation or a translation into modern English, so that I can understand what it is about?
It is a fragment of 'The Shepheardes Calender' by Edmund Spenser:
Cvddie, for shame hold vp thy heauye head,
And let vs cast with what delight to chace:
And weary thys long lingring Phoebus race.
Whilome thou wont the shepheards laddes to leade,
In rymes, in ridles, and in bydding base:
Now they in thee, and thou in sleepe art dead?
Thank you in advance.
Alina