Prose of the English RenaissanceJohn William Hebel Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1952 - 882 pages |
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Page 580
... common people such public sports . Politic and well ordered commonwealths endeavor rather carefully to unite and assemble their citizens together ; as in serious offices of devotion , so in honest exercises of recreation . Common ...
... common people such public sports . Politic and well ordered commonwealths endeavor rather carefully to unite and assemble their citizens together ; as in serious offices of devotion , so in honest exercises of recreation . Common ...
Page 700
... common sense , phantasy , memory . Their objects are not only things present , but they perceive the sensible species of things to come , past , absent , such as were before in the sense . This common sense is the judge or moderator of ...
... common sense , phantasy , memory . Their objects are not only things present , but they perceive the sensible species of things to come , past , absent , such as were before in the sense . This common sense is the judge or moderator of ...
Page 701
... common to all sensible creatures . " Sleep is a rest or binding of the outward senses , and of the common sense , for the preservation of body and soul " ( as Scaliger defines it ) ; for when the common sense resteth , the outward ...
... common to all sensible creatures . " Sleep is a rest or binding of the outward senses , and of the common sense , for the preservation of body and soul " ( as Scaliger defines it ) ; for when the common sense resteth , the outward ...
Contents
SIR THOMAS MORE | 1 |
JOHN BOURCHIER LORD BERNErs | 24 |
SIMON FISH | 33 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Spencer Aeneid Aliena Aristotle beauty behold better body Caesar called cause church Cicero command common conceit death delight desire discourse divers divine doth earth England English Euphues Euphuistic evil excellent eyes fair faith father fear fortune Ganimede gentlemen give Greek hand hath heart heaven Henry VIII Hippocrates honest honor Isocrates Italy John Lyly judgment king knowledge Latin learning live London Lord Lucilla maketh man's manner matter mind nature never noble passions perfect Philautus philosopher Phoebe Plato pleasure Plutarch poets praise prince quoth reason RICHARD HAKLUYT Roger Ascham Rosader Rosalynde saith Saladyne scholar sense shalt shew soul speak sweet thee thine things Thomas Thomas Elyot Thomas Lodge thou thought tion tongue translation truth unto virtue wherein whereof wisdom wise words young