Table Talk of John SeldenQuaritch, 1927 - 200 sidor |
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Sida 66
... peece of wood , & hee runns downe into the Cellar & takes the spigott & in the meane time all the beere runns about the house , When his freinds are absent the King will be lost . 9. Tis hard & c . retro.4 KNIGHTS SERVICE Knight Service ...
... peece of wood , & hee runns downe into the Cellar & takes the spigott & in the meane time all the beere runns about the house , When his freinds are absent the King will be lost . 9. Tis hard & c . retro.4 KNIGHTS SERVICE Knight Service ...
Sida 68
... peece of redd & there a peece of blew , here a peece of Greene & there a peece of Orange Tawney . Wee borrow words from the ffrench , Italian , Latine , as every pedantick man pleases . 4. Wee have more words then notions , halfe a ...
... peece of redd & there a peece of blew , here a peece of Greene & there a peece of Orange Tawney . Wee borrow words from the ffrench , Italian , Latine , as every pedantick man pleases . 4. Wee have more words then notions , halfe a ...
Sida 74
... peece of his owne plum- tree ; you see what opinion this man had of the Image , & to this tended & c . 5. ffor the ffirst Irish Lords to take upon them here in England , is as if the Cooke in the ffayers5 should come to my Lady Kents ...
... peece of his owne plum- tree ; you see what opinion this man had of the Image , & to this tended & c . 5. ffor the ffirst Irish Lords to take upon them here in England , is as if the Cooke in the ffayers5 should come to my Lady Kents ...
Sida 99
... peece came2 to an Noble . But now ' tis forbidden by an order from my Lord Marshall , the Heraulds carry his warr [ an ] t about them . 2. Wee charge the prelaticall Clergie with popery to make ym odious tho ' wee know they are guiltye ...
... peece came2 to an Noble . But now ' tis forbidden by an order from my Lord Marshall , the Heraulds carry his warr [ an ] t about them . 2. Wee charge the prelaticall Clergie with popery to make ym odious tho ' wee know they are guiltye ...
Sida 131
... peece of bread by the papist , The Third p [ er ] son is made of his owne ffrenzie , malice , ignorance & folly by the Roundhead ( to all these the spiritt is intitled ) ( a ) One the Baker makes , the other the Cobler , & betwixt these ...
... peece of bread by the papist , The Third p [ er ] son is made of his owne ffrenzie , malice , ignorance & folly by the Roundhead ( to all these the spiritt is intitled ) ( a ) One the Baker makes , the other the Cobler , & betwixt these ...
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Table-Talk of John Selden Edward Fitzgerald,John Selden,Ri 1609-1680 Milward Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2016 |
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ag[ains]t appears beleive Ben Jonson betwixt Bishops Bodleian Bodleian Library cann cannott Canon Christ Christian Church of Rome Clergie conj conscience copies Court deleted Divines EDWARD EDWARD II England English F. W. MAITLAND ffathers ffor gett give gott honour House of Commons Inner Temple Interlined Jewes JOHN SELDEN Judge Jugling land learning lett Lincoln's Lincoln's Inn London Lord Milward Minister never Oath obvious slip Oxford p[er]son papists Parliament Parliamt peece pope preach preist Presbiters prince protest putt quiett R.'s note reading reason Religion Reynolds Reynolds's note sayes scribe seems Selden Society selfe sence sev[er]all shee Supplied Table Talk tell Temporall thing thinke Tryall twas university of Oxford W. C. BOLLAND wee know words ye Church ye King ye Law yo¹
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Sida 178 - was a person whom no character can flatter, or transmit in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue.
Sida 195 - ... which we call the Year Books ; and it is difficult to see how in present circumstances he could know much more of them than he does. Yet these mediaeval manuscripts are of supreme importance not only to the legal historian and to the lawyer, but to the general historian of mediaeval England, to the historian of morals, to the philologist— testibus Skeat and Paul Meyer — to every one, in short, who would fully know or fully tell the tale of our peoples, and would learn why the things that...
Sida 97 - Fleet-street, and sit upon a stall, and twirl a bandstring, or play with a rush, then all the boys in the street would laugh at him. 6. Verse proves nothing but the quantity of syllables, they are not meant for logic.
Sida 35 - Some men make it a case of conscience, whether a man may have a pigeon-house, because his pigeons eat other folks corn. But there is no such thing as conscience in the business : the matter is, whether he be a man of such quality, that the state allows him to have a dove-house ; if so, there's an end of the business ; his pigeons have a right to eat where they please themselves.
Sida 178 - Stand forth my object, then. You that have been Ever at home, yet have all countries seen ; And like a compass, keeping one foot still Upon your centre, do your circle fill Of general knowledge; watch'd men, manners too, Heard what times past have said, seen what ours do!
Sida 196 - The Selden Society is trying, so far as its scanty financial resources allow it, to have these invaluable sources of information edited and printed, and so put at the service of all who care to know more of our national history than they can know at present. Then, besides the publication of the Year Books, the Selden Society cares for the editing and printing of various other manuscripts dealing with our early legal history and procedure. Amongst these are several volumes of select pleas held in...
Sida 193 - FOUNDED 1887. To ENCOURAGE THE STUDY AND ADVANCE THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH LAW.
Sida 126 - There must be some laymen in the synod, to overlook the clergy, lest they spoil the civil work ; just as when the good woman puts a cat into the milk-house to kill a mouse, she sends her maid to look after the cat, lest the cat should eat up the cream.
Sida 61 - A king is a thing men have made for their own sakes, for quietness sake : just as in a family one man is appointed to buy the meat ; if every man should buy, or if there were many buyers, they would never agree ; one would buy what the other liked not, or what the other had bought before ; so there would be a confusion. But that charge being committed to one, he, according to his discretion, pleases all ; if they have not what they would have one day, they shall have it the next, or something as...
Sida 44 - Excuse me, said the Don, for calling him so, I know not into what hands I may fall ; and if I happen into his, I hope he will use me the better for giving him good words.