Sir John Betjeman
Sir Walter Scott wrote "Lochinvar."https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/52300
it is fantastic poem i loved it very much . sir ezekiel was really versatile person.......
In 1606 Michael Drayton wrote this ode βTo the Virginian Voyage,β in honour of Sir Walter Raleigh's first expedition to plant a permanent settlement of English people in North America. THERE
Sir Walter Scott wrote the story Ivanhoe.
Sir Nicketty Nox gets in a rage in the poem by Hugh Chesterman because he feels that he is not being listened to or taken seriously by others. This sense of frustration and unappreciation leads to his outburst of anger and a desire to assert his authority.
Sir Henry Newbold
Sir John Betjeman
Ancient knight
Sir Nicketty Nox Sir Nicketty Nox was an ancient knight, So old was he that he'd lost his sight. Blind as a mole, and slim as a fox, And dry as a stick was Sir Nicketty Nox. His sword and buckler were old and cracked, So was his charger and that's a fact. Thin as a rake from head to hocks, Was this rickety Nag of Sir Nicketty Nox. A wife he had and daughters three, And all were as old as old could be. They mended the shirts and darned the socks Of that old Antiquity, Nicketty Nox. Sir Nicketty Nox would fly in a rage If anyone tried to guess his age. He'd mouth and mutter and tear his locks, This very pernickety Nicketty Nox. Written as you state by Hugh Chesterman
Sir Walter Scott wrote "Lochinvar."https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/52300
Onomatopoeia
The phrase suggests that Sir Nicketty Nox appears incredibly dry or dehydrated, emphasizing a lack of moisture in his appearance. It implies that he might look very thin, brittle, or withered.
Sir Walter Scott wrote this in his poem, "Marmion," first published in 1808.The actual line is: Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.
John Donne wrote the poem "The Song" (commonly known as "A Ballad Upon A Wedding") which was first published in 1633. The poem humorously describes a wedding ceremony and celebrates the couple's love.
well,everyone had wrote about sir galahad.
The music is by James Sanderson (c. 1769 - c. 1841). The title of the song is from a poem by Sir Walter Scott . The words are rarely sung and others have written parodies of Scott's poem.