Prose of the English RenaissanceJohn William Hebel Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1952 - 882 pages |
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Page 124
... matter and good utterance never or seldom asunder . For all such authors as be fullest of good matter and right judgment in doctrine , be likewise always most proper in words , most apt in sentence , most plain and pure in uttering the ...
... matter and good utterance never or seldom asunder . For all such authors as be fullest of good matter and right judgment in doctrine , be likewise always most proper in words , most apt in sentence , most plain and pure in uttering the ...
Page 127
... matter and also for the manner of writing thereof . 30 For the whole book consisteth in these two points only : in good matter , and good handling of the matter . And first for the matter , it is whole Aristotle's , whatsoever Antony in ...
... matter and also for the manner of writing thereof . 30 For the whole book consisteth in these two points only : in good matter , and good handling of the matter . And first for the matter , it is whole Aristotle's , whatsoever Antony in ...
Page 624
... matter of fact ) , or else of matter of art and opinion . As to the former , we see the experience and inconvenience of this error in ecclesiastical history , which hath too easily received and registered reports and narrations of ...
... matter of fact ) , or else of matter of art and opinion . As to the former , we see the experience and inconvenience of this error in ecclesiastical history , which hath too easily received and registered reports and narrations of ...
Contents
SIR THOMAS MORE | 1 |
JOHN BOURCHIER LORD BERNERS | 24 |
The Chronicles of Froissart vol 1 chap | 146 |
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Adam Spencer Aeneas Aliena answered Aristotle beauty behold better body Brutus Caesar called cause Cicero cometh command conceit counsel death delight desire discourse divers divine doth earth England Euphues evil excellent eyes fair faith father fear Ferardo folly fortune Ganimede gentlemen give giveth goeth grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven honest honor Isocrates Italy judgment king knowledge Latin learning light live look Lord Lucilla maketh man's manner matter mean mind Naples nature never noble perfect Philautus Phoebe Plato pleasure Plutarch poets Pompey Pothinus praise prince quoth reason ROGER ASCHAM Rosader Rosalynde saith Saladyne scholar shew sort soul speak sweet thee thine things Thomas Elyot thought tion tongue true truth unto virtue wherein whereof wisdom wise words worthy Xenophon young