We are talking about 400 year old English here. It is difficult for  
many native speakers. The lute songs are not just normal English but  
sometimes very deep. The syntax often blows my mind, - very hard to  
hang on to sometimes. I wouldn't worry at all about such a detail. If  
you can understand it, you are ahead of the game. I heard that  
Shakespeare spelled his name 17 different ways or something like that!

I am not an expert, maybe someone else has deep thoughts.

cheers,

On Mar 17, 2006, at 6:20 AM, LGS-Europe wrote:

> third verse:
>
> ..joyful looks excells.
> Tears kills the heart...
>
> What's with the s-es after the verbs? 'Looks' and 'tears' (noun,  
> for sure in
> the contaxt) are plural, so I would expect 'excell' and 'kill'.
> Someone told me these could 'abstract nouns' and have singelur  
> verb. I can
> imagine something like that with the 'teares'. They are not just  
> the salty
> drops
> coming from the eyes, but are an abstract image of sadness, and as  
> such
> singular. But with the 'looks' it doesn't quite feel natural. Just  
> early
> spelling, or sloppiness thereof? But an 's' behind both verbs...
> Any deep thoughts out there? I wish Bob Spencer was still around to  
> ask.
> Sigh.
>
> David
>
>
>
> ************************************
> David van Ooijen
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Http://www.davidvanooijen.nl
> ************************************
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>
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Ed Durbrow
Saitama, Japan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www9.plala.or.jp/edurbrow/



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