Pictures of Old EnglandMacmillan and Company, 1861 - 457 sider |
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Side 13
... never be severed from Canterbury , notwithstanding the changes which time has wrought and still may bring with it . The associations to which we refer are especially con- nected with the cathedral , of which , as we have already ...
... never be severed from Canterbury , notwithstanding the changes which time has wrought and still may bring with it . The associations to which we refer are especially con- nected with the cathedral , of which , as we have already ...
Side 20
... heaven was impending over his crowned head in ven- geance for the crime to which the king himself had given the first impulse . Henry , who hitherto had never been at a loss as to the choice of action , 20 CANTERBURY , AND THE WORSHIP.
... heaven was impending over his crowned head in ven- geance for the crime to which the king himself had given the first impulse . Henry , who hitherto had never been at a loss as to the choice of action , 20 CANTERBURY , AND THE WORSHIP.
Side 33
... instruction necessary to their earnest calling . Thus these Catholic institutions became , what the Gaelic cloisters never were , training - schools for D the clergy and laity , in which these classes were MONKS AND MENDICANT FRIARS . 33.
... instruction necessary to their earnest calling . Thus these Catholic institutions became , what the Gaelic cloisters never were , training - schools for D the clergy and laity , in which these classes were MONKS AND MENDICANT FRIARS . 33.
Side 36
... never been entirely destroyed . Even the waste within the heart of the people vanished , and their old hereditary Paganism gradually yielded to the advance of agriculture , and to the blessings shed abroad by the seeds of truth that had ...
... never been entirely destroyed . Even the waste within the heart of the people vanished , and their old hereditary Paganism gradually yielded to the advance of agriculture , and to the blessings shed abroad by the seeds of truth that had ...
Side 42
... . As Latin continued to be the language used in the services and public business of the Church , the study of this tongue was never wholly neglected , and many English monks , more especially in the time of 42 MONKS AND MENDICANT FRIARS .
... . As Latin continued to be the language used in the services and public business of the Church , the study of this tongue was never wholly neglected , and many English monks , more especially in the time of 42 MONKS AND MENDICANT FRIARS .
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abbey adherents ancient appear Archbishop authorities barons became belonged Bishop Bohemia burghers Canterbury cathedral character Chaucer Christian Church civic classes clergy Cologne council Council of Constance court Crown 8vo dignity doctrines Duke Duke of Brabant Duke of Gloucester Earl ecclesiastical Edition Edward Edward III Emperor Empire endeavoured England English faith favour fcap foreign France Franciscans French German Gloucester Gower guilds hand Hanseatic Hanseatic League Henry Henry VI hitherto honour imperial John King knights land Lollards London Lord ment middle ages monarch monastery monastic monks moreover noble Norman occasion once origin Oxford Parliament party period person poet political Pope possessed prelates prince probably rank Reformation regard relations Richard Romans Rome royal Saxon scarcely secular secure Sigismund soon spirit Steelyard Teutonic knights Thomas Becket throne tion took towns trade Westminster Wiclif William the Conqueror
Populære avsnitt
Side 5 - European History, Narrated in a Series of Historical Selections from the best Authorities. Edited and arranged by EM SEWELL and CM YONGE. First Series, crown 8vo. 6s. ; Second Series, 1088-1228, crown 8vo. 6s. Third Edition. " We know of scarcely anything," says the GUARDIAN, of this volume, "which is so likely to raise to a higher level the average standard of English education.
Side 8 - Stands alone as the one general history of the country, for the sake of which all others, if young and old are wise, will be speedily and surely set aside.
Side 6 - The book indeed is full of instruction and interest to students of all ages, and he must be a well-informed man indeed who will not rise from its perusal with clearer and more accurate ideas of a too much neglected portion of English history.
Side 19 - Wilson. — A MEMOIR OF GEORGE WILSON, MD, FRSE, Regius Professor of Technology in the University of Edinburgh. By his SISTER. New Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s. "An exquisite and touching portrait of a rare and beautiful spirit.
Side 24 - Stephen (CE)— THE SERVICE OF THE POOR; Being an Inquiry into the Reasons for and against the Establishment of Religious Sisterhoods for Charitable Purposes. By CAROLINE EMILIA STEPHEN. Crown 8vo. 6s. 6d. "The ablest advocate of a better line of work in this direction that we have ever seen.
Side 18 - The result is a vivid picture of tropical life, which may be read with unflagging interest, and a sufficient account of his scientific conclusions to stimulate our appetite without wearying us by detail. In short, we may safely say that we have never read a more agreeable book of its kind.
Side 292 - Areopagitica: a speech to the Parliament of England, for the liberty of unlicensed printing; with prefatory remarks, copious notes, and excursive illustrations, by T.