A History of England in the Lives of Englishmen, Volume 1A. Fullarton, 1853 |
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Page 10
... took their final leave of the island . The southern part of it was now again left as free as the northern had always been ; but , for the present crisis , the arts and social refinements which the South Britons had learned from their ...
... took their final leave of the island . The southern part of it was now again left as free as the northern had always been ; but , for the present crisis , the arts and social refinements which the South Britons had learned from their ...
Page 14
... took place for a long period after this , was the famous Arthur , King or Prince of Cornwall , who , if we are to believe the common accounts , however , commenced his military career under Ambrosius , in the year 466 , when he was yet ...
... took place for a long period after this , was the famous Arthur , King or Prince of Cornwall , who , if we are to believe the common accounts , however , commenced his military career under Ambrosius , in the year 466 , when he was yet ...
Page 18
... took his measures in con- formity with the situation in which he had placed himself , and know- ing the imperious temper of the king of Northumbria , and how certain it was that he would have immediately to experience his hostility , he ...
... took his measures in con- formity with the situation in which he had placed himself , and know- ing the imperious temper of the king of Northumbria , and how certain it was that he would have immediately to experience his hostility , he ...
Page 23
... took advantage of this state of things first by secretly encouraging the East Angles to revolt , and then by openly joining them in the war of liberty which he had thus persuaded them to wage . The power of Bernulph was quite unable to ...
... took advantage of this state of things first by secretly encouraging the East Angles to revolt , and then by openly joining them in the war of liberty which he had thus persuaded them to wage . The power of Bernulph was quite unable to ...
Page 25
... took full advantage of his mild and unwarlike disposition to renew their ravages . They now indeed began to visit some part of England pretty regularly once every year ; and from these expeditions they rarely failed to return home ...
... took full advantage of his mild and unwarlike disposition to renew their ravages . They now indeed began to visit some part of England pretty regularly once every year ; and from these expeditions they rarely failed to return home ...
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abbot afterwards Aldhelm Alfred Anglo-Saxon Anselm appears archbishop archbishop of Canterbury archbishop of York army Athelstan authority barons battle Becket Bede bishop bishop of Winchester BORN A. D. Bretwalda brother Canterbury Canute castle cause character charter chronicle church clergy command Conqueror conquest council court crown Danes daughter death dignity dominions duke duke of Normandy Dunstan earl ecclesiastical Edmund Edward enemy England English Ethelred father favour France French gave Gloucester Godwin Harold Henry Henry III Hist historian holy honour John king king of England king's kingdom knights land Lanfranc learning London lord ment monarch monastery monks nation nobles Norman Normandy Oxford Paris parliament period person poetry pope possession prelate prince queen received reign Richard Robert of Gloucester Rome royal Saxon says Scots sent soon sovereign subjects succeeded success throne tion took troops Wickliffe William Winchester writers
Popular passages
Page 111 - William, not to be behind with his enemy in vaunting, sent him a message by some monks, requiring him either to resign the kingdom, or to hold it of him in fealty, or to submit their cause to the arbitration of the pope, or to fight him in single combat. Harold replied that the God of battles would soon be the arbiter of all their differences.
Page 310 - As, whom to employ, whom to reward, whom to enquire of, whom to beware of, what were the dependencies, what were the factions, and the like ; keeping, as it were, a journal of his thoughts. There is to this day a merry tale ; that his monkey...
Page 257 - Some menacing expressions which they had dropped gave a suspicion of their design, and the king dispatched a messenger after them, charging them to attempt nothing against the person of the primate ; but these orders arrived too late to prevent their fatal purpose.
Page 273 - Great, verily, was the glory of the English tongue (An.-Sax.) before the Norman Conquest, in this, that the Old English could express most aptly all the conceits of the mind in their own tongue, without borrowing from any.
Page 222 - So help me God I will keep all these articles inviolate, as I am a man, as I am a Christian, as I am a knight, and as I am a king crowned and anointed.
Page 292 - And for the faithful and loving hearts, and also the great labours that ye have borne and sustained toward me in the recovering of my said right and title which I now possess, I thank you with all my heart, and if I had any better good to reward you withal than my body, ye should have it, the which shall always be ready for your defence, never sparing nor letting for no jeopardy, praying you all of your hearty assistance and good countenance, as I shall be unto you...
Page 415 - Lowth has eloquently expressed, was noble, uniform, and complete. " It was no less than to provide for the perpetual maintenance and instruction of two hundred scholars, to afford them a liberal support, and to lead them through a perfect course of education, from the first elements of letters, through the whole circle of the sciences ; from the lowest class of grammatical learning to the highest degrees in the several faculties.
Page 216 - It seems to be apparent from Glanville that villainage was a generic term for servitude in the reign of Henry II., so that the villain of the Great Charter must have been at least a species of serf. The provision which directs that the supreme civil court shall be stationary, instead of following the king's person, is a proof of that regard to the regularity, accessibility, independence, and dignity of public justice, of which the general predominance peculiarly characterizes that venerable monument...
Page 301 - Christ committed the gospel to the clergy and doctors of the Church, that they might minister it to the laity and weaker persons according to the exigency of the times and the wants of men.
Page 212 - John, however, refused; and the court pronounced judgment, that " whereas John, duke of Normandy, in violation of his oath to Philip his lord, had murdered the son of his elder brother, a homager of the crown of France and near kinsman to the king, and had perpetrated the crime within the seigniory of France, he was found guilty of felony and treason, and was therefore adjudged to forfeit all the lands which he held by homage.