Prose of the English RenaissanceJohn William Hebel Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1952 - 882 pages |
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Page 70
... cometh nothing forth . Well , well , this is one thing I will say unto you , from whence it cometh I know even from the devil . I know his intent in it . For if ye bring it to pass that the yeomanry be not able to put their sons to ...
... cometh nothing forth . Well , well , this is one thing I will say unto you , from whence it cometh I know even from the devil . I know his intent in it . For if ye bring it to pass that the yeomanry be not able to put their sons to ...
Page 178
... cometh . To be able to allege good and probable reasons upon every matter . 10 To be seen in tongues , and especially in Italian , French , and Spanish . To direct all things to a good end . To procure wherever he goeth that men may ...
... cometh . To be able to allege good and probable reasons upon every matter . 10 To be seen in tongues , and especially in Italian , French , and Spanish . To direct all things to a good end . To procure wherever he goeth that men may ...
Page 565
... cometh from else where , and yet nevertheless we be both fed , clad , and otherwise served with foreign commodities and delights as plentiful as with our domestical . Which thing cometh to pass by the mean of merchandise only , which ...
... cometh from else where , and yet nevertheless we be both fed , clad , and otherwise served with foreign commodities and delights as plentiful as with our domestical . Which thing cometh to pass by the mean of merchandise only , which ...
Contents
SIR THOMAS MORE | 1 |
JOHN BOURCHIER LORD Berners | 24 |
SIMON FISH | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Spencer Aliena answered Aristotle Baldassare Castiglione beauty behold better body Brutus Caesar called cause Cicero cometh command conceit counsel coveting death delight desire diligence discourse divers divine doth earth England Euphues evil excellent eyes fair faith father fear Ferardo folly fortune Ganimede gentlemen give goeth grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven honest honor Isocrates Italy judgment king knowledge Latin learning light live look Lord lover Lucilla maketh man's manner matter mean mind Naples nature never noble perfect Philautus Phoebe Plato pleasure Plutarch poets 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