The History of England from the Earliest Period to the Death of Elizabeth: The history of England: middle ages. In five volumesLongman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, 1830 |
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Страница xiii
... Christians with the Spanish Arabs 374 376 - Constantine Afer - Sylvester II . Other Christian students of Arabic English students - Athelard's Arabian treatise Arabian studies pursued in England ib . 377 378 379 ib . 382 Studies and use ...
... Christians with the Spanish Arabs 374 376 - Constantine Afer - Sylvester II . Other Christian students of Arabic English students - Athelard's Arabian treatise Arabian studies pursued in England ib . 377 378 379 ib . 382 Studies and use ...
Страница 12
... Christian souls ! ' Rolls Parl . 6. p . 172 . 21 Warrant to pay 10 marcs , yearly , to sir John Perty , to sing for the king , in a chapel before the holy rood at Northampton , ' dated 28 March 1484. Harl . MS . 168 . 22 The order to ...
... Christian souls ! ' Rolls Parl . 6. p . 172 . 21 Warrant to pay 10 marcs , yearly , to sir John Perty , to sing for the king , in a chapel before the holy rood at Northampton , ' dated 28 March 1484. Harl . MS . 168 . 22 The order to ...
Страница 102
... Christian and kingly heart.49 In danger prompt , self - present and determined , his spirit always rose to the necessary energy , and de- vised and performed what the exigence demanded . It was his firm and lofty wish always to look his ...
... Christian and kingly heart.49 In danger prompt , self - present and determined , his spirit always rose to the necessary energy , and de- vised and performed what the exigence demanded . It was his firm and lofty wish always to look his ...
Страница 135
... Christian writer ; he also makes the recommendation of Quintilian an essenttial part of his definition : Orator est vir bonus dicendi peritus . ' HISTORY OF BOOK our simple - minded Bede employed himself K 4 DURING THE MIDDLE AGES . 135 -
... Christian writer ; he also makes the recommendation of Quintilian an essenttial part of his definition : Orator est vir bonus dicendi peritus . ' HISTORY OF BOOK our simple - minded Bede employed himself K 4 DURING THE MIDDLE AGES . 135 -
Страница 162
... Alb . Abb . p . 66 , eve MM II . OF LATIN LITERA- AFTER THE every Christian country 162 HISTORY OF ENGLAND , Ignorance became discreditable - First produce of the Anglo-Norman literature - Latin language attained - Latin versifiers -
... Alb . Abb . p . 66 , eve MM II . OF LATIN LITERA- AFTER THE every Christian country 162 HISTORY OF ENGLAND , Ignorance became discreditable - First produce of the Anglo-Norman literature - Latin language attained - Latin versifiers -
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Чести термини и фразе
afterwards altho ancient ANGLO Anglo-Norman Anglo-Saxon animal Arabian Arabs Aristotle Arthur Averroes Avicenna became Bernard Andreas bishop body Bretagne Breton Calixtus called cause century CHAP Charlemagne Christianity church Cicero clergy CONQUEST crown cultivated death Deity divine duke English ENGLISH POETRY evil feeling France GION IN BOOK Grecian Greek Harl Hence Henry Henry VII Henry's Hist HISTORY OF ENGLAND HISTORY OF RELI HISTORYOF honor human improvement intellectual Jeffry's king king's knights knowlege lady Lanfranc Latin letter LITERA LITERARY literature lord marcs mentions mind monasteries monks moral nation nature NORMAN NORMAN CONQUEST papal Paulicians persons philosophers poems poetry poets Pope popular priest prince Provençal Quintilian reason REIGN OF HEN rhetoric RICH Richard Richard III rime Roman Rome Saracens says shew soul sovereign Spain spirit taste things thou tion translated Troubadours TURE Turpin's verses virtue Wace Wicliffe
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Страница 98 - Certainly his times for good commonwealth's laws did excel. So as he may justly be celebrated for the best lawgiver to this nation, after king Edward the First: for his laws, whoso marks them well, are deep, and not vulgar; not made upon the spur of a particular occasion for the present, but out of providence of the future, to make the estate of his people still more and more happy; after the manner of the legislators in ancient and heroical times.
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Страница 92 - I have, with all my heart and good will, given and granted unto you and my dame, not only in this but in all other things that I may know should be to your honour, and pleasure, and weal of your soul. I shall be as glad to please you as your heart can desire it, and I know well, that I am as much bounden so to do, as any creature living for the great and singular motherly love and affection that it hath pleased you at all times to bear towards me. Wherefore, mine own most loving mother, in my most...
Страница 339 - Set not up therefore any equals unto GOD, against your own knowledge. If ye be in doubt concerning that revelation which we have sent down unto our servant, produce a chapter like unto it, and call upon your witnesses, besides Goo,3 if ye say truth.
Страница 484 - Martin supposed an universal man to be like a knight of the shire, or a burgess of a corporation, that represented a great many individuals. His father asked him, if he could not frame the idea of an universal Lord Mayor...
Страница 492 - ... of our own minds, are yet only such as the understanding frames to itself by repeating and joining together ideas, that it had either from objects of sense, or from its own operations about them...
Страница 62 - Tower, and buried by him in some place which, by means of the priest's death soon after, could not be known. Thus much was then delivered abroad, to be the effect of those examinations ; but the king, nevertheless, made no use of them in any of his declarations, whereby, as it seems, those examinations left the business somewhat perplexed. And as for Sir James Tirrel, he was soon after beheaded in the Tower-yard for other matters of treason.
Страница 124 - Constantinople adopted the follies, though not the virtues, of ancient Rome ; and the same factions which had agitated the circus raged with redoubled fury in the hippodrome. Under the reign of Anastasius, this popular frenzy was inflamed by religious zeal ; and the greens, who had treacherously concealed stones and daggers under baskets of fruit, massacred, at a solemn festival, three thousand of their blue adversaries.