Cambrian Quarterly Magazine and Celtic Repertory, Том 3proprietors, 1831 |
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Страница 11
... learned ethics of the profoundest philosophers , and may be considered as the first and most important step towards general civilization ; and those laws of knighthood which effected this beneficial change in the social condition of ...
... learned ethics of the profoundest philosophers , and may be considered as the first and most important step towards general civilization ; and those laws of knighthood which effected this beneficial change in the social condition of ...
Страница 79
... learned in the Breton language . ‡ Samuel Bochart , a writer of this era , found a great coincidence between the Breton and the Phenician ; he says , that Camden and the rest were ignorant of what he was going to declare ; that there is ...
... learned in the Breton language . ‡ Samuel Bochart , a writer of this era , found a great coincidence between the Breton and the Phenician ; he says , that Camden and the rest were ignorant of what he was going to declare ; that there is ...
Страница 80
... learned man died in 1653 . About 1655 , Dom Armand le Bouthillier , reformer of La Trappe , refused the bishopric of Leon , because he knew not the language of the country . La Harpe and several critics have vainly endeavoured to ...
... learned man died in 1653 . About 1655 , Dom Armand le Bouthillier , reformer of La Trappe , refused the bishopric of Leon , because he knew not the language of the country . La Harpe and several critics have vainly endeavoured to ...
Страница 88
... learned Baxter wrote upon the ancient language of Cornwall , and he states that in his time , 1720 , it had already degenerated . We here give the Paternoster in that language , and it will be seen that it approaches nearly to the ...
... learned Baxter wrote upon the ancient language of Cornwall , and he states that in his time , 1720 , it had already degenerated . We here give the Paternoster in that language , and it will be seen that it approaches nearly to the ...
Страница 89
... learned research on the subject : we could quote sundry hard and very imposing names on the occasion , much to the edification of our readers , and propound , for instance , that Suidas gives κιδαρις as " ( a covering for the head ...
... learned research on the subject : we could quote sundry hard and very imposing names on the occasion , much to the edification of our readers , and propound , for instance , that Suidas gives κιδαρις as " ( a covering for the head ...
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Страница 238 - Oh friar, grey friar, full rash was thy choice; The stone, the good stone, which away thou hast thrown, Was the stone of all stones, the philosopher's stone !' "The friar looked pale, when his error he knew; The friar looked red, and the friar looked blue; And heels over head, from the point of a rock, He plunged, without stopping to pull off his frock.
Страница 167 - Our late ingenious Academician, Wilson, has, I fear, been guilty, like many of his predecessors, of introducing gods and goddesses, ideal beings, into scenes which were by no means prepared to receive such personages. His landscapes were in reality too near common nature to admit supernatural objects.
Страница 233 - Mr. Toogood, the co-operationist, who will have neither righting nor praying; but wants to parcel out the world into squares like a chess-board, with a community on each, raising everything for one another, with a great steam-engine to serve them in common for tailor and hosier, kitchen and cook.
Страница 273 - That in every city or borough which shall return a member or members to serve in any future parliament, every male person of full age, and not subject to any legal incapacity...
Страница 238 - Hold, father, here's store, For the good of the church, and the good of the poor ; " Then he gave him the stone ; but, ere more he could speak, Wrath came on the friar, so holy and meek : He had stretched forth his hand to receive the red gold, And he thought himself mocked by Gwenwynwyn the Bold ; And in scorn of the gift, and in rage at the giver, He jerked it immediately into the river. Gwenwynwyn, aghast, not a syllable spake ; The philosopher's stone made a duck and a drake : Two systems of...
Страница 172 - Wilson, without so great a feature, had a more varied and more proportionate power: he observed nature in all her appearances, and had a characteristic touch for all her forms. But though in effects of dewy freshness and silent evening lights, few...
Страница 498 - I like the leeke above all herbes and flowers. When first we wore the same the feild was ours. The leeke is white and greene, wherby is ment That Britaines are both stout and eminent ; Next to the lion and the unicorn. The leeke's the fairest emblyn that is wome. Hurl. MS. 1977. The bishop's " Last Good Night," a single sheet satire, dated 1642, has a stanza which runs thus : —
Страница 238 - He found it at length, and he made its first proof By turning to gold all the lead of his roof: Then he bought some magnanimous heroes, all fire, Who lived but to smite and be smitten for hire. " With these, on the plains like a torrent he broke; He...
Страница 97 - In any age or country, such a prince would be a prodigy. Perhaps there is no example of any man who so happily combined the magnanimous with the mild virtues, who joined so much energy in war, with so remarkable a cultivation of the useful and beautiful arts of peace, and whose versatile faculties were so happily inserted in their due place and measure, as to support and secure each other, and give solidity and strength to the whole character. That such a miracle should occur in a barbarous age and...
Страница 232 - He turns all the affairs of this world into questions of buying and selling. He is the Spirit of the Frozen Ocean to everything like romance and sentiment. He condenses their volume of steam into a drop of cold water in a moment.