Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The old often dance better, and the fat foot it as featly as the thin.
She dances featly.
The lane was a place of enchantment--a long, moonlit colonnade adown which beguiling wood nymphs might have footed it featly.
The question of homage and featly, however, was put off, as the Joanna and her husband, Philip the Fair, were both monarch and thus swore homage to none.
"Come unto these yellow sands Curtseyed when we have and kissed, The wild winds whist, Foot it featly here and there And, sweet sprites, the burden bear.
Yet, Nymph, if once alone, The ball hath featly fled - Not smitten from the bone - That drive doth still atone; And one long shot laid dead Our grief to the winds hath blown!
American book publishers should lift a draught for you on your upcoming birth- and death day, and vow not to drumble the plays and sonnets but to publish them featly, since the work makes up the greatest backlist of any writer in history.
Meantime some rude Arion's restless hand Wakes the brisk harmony that sailors love; A circle there of merry listeners stand, Or to some well-known measure featly move Thoughtless, as if on shore they still were free to rove."
His finest look back is "The Real Names," recalling his friends by the parts they took in Shakespeare productions at school: Caliban ("Owen Kelly, loping and gowling"), Ariel ("the already/sweetly featly tuneful Philip Coulter").
As when a lady, turning in the dance, Doth foot it featly, and advances scarce One step before the other to the ground; Over the yellow and vermilion flowers Thus turn'd she at my suit, most maiden-like, Valing her sober eyes, and came so near, That I distinctly caught the dulcet sound.