Slosson my supporte, As once y was his soul's delite- Holde hym not ever in yr.
"Eugene Field, A Study In Heredity And Contradictions"
Slason Thompson
The Neighbourhoode is too hot to Holde them; olde Friends cowardlie and suspicious, olde and new Foes in League together.
"Mary Powell & Deborah's Diary"
Anne Manning
They called such linking verse Epimone, the Latines versus intercalaris, and we may terme him the Loue-burden, following the originall, or if it please you, the long repeate: in one respect because that one verse alone beareth the whole burden of the song according to the originall: in another respect, for that it comes by large distances to be often repeated, as in this ditty made by the noble knight Sir Philip Sidney, My true loue hath my heart and I haue his, By iust exchange one for another geuen: I Holde his deare, and mine he cannot misse, There neuer was a better bargaine driuen.
"The Arte of English Poesie"
George Puttenham