The Camp of RefugeC. Knight, 1844 |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 6 - 10 z 76.
Strana 40
... English people ! Ah woe ! was it for this that Saxon saints and martyrs died and bequeathed their bones to our keeping and their miracles to our superintendence ; that Saxon kings and queens descended from their thrones to live among us ...
... English people ! Ah woe ! was it for this that Saxon saints and martyrs died and bequeathed their bones to our keeping and their miracles to our superintendence ; that Saxon kings and queens descended from their thrones to live among us ...
Strana 52
... English lords , and such persecuted Saxons of whatsoever degree ,, as fled from the op pression of the conquerors to the isle of Ely . Thanes dispossessed of their lands , bishops deprived of their mitres , abbats driven from their ...
... English lords , and such persecuted Saxons of whatsoever degree ,, as fled from the op pression of the conquerors to the isle of Ely . Thanes dispossessed of their lands , bishops deprived of their mitres , abbats driven from their ...
Strana 54
... English race , to be disinterred ; and , gathering their bones together , he had cast them in one heap without the gates , as if , instead of being the bones of holy and beatified monks , they had been the bones of sheep , or oxen , or ...
... English race , to be disinterred ; and , gathering their bones together , he had cast them in one heap without the gates , as if , instead of being the bones of holy and beatified monks , they had been the bones of sheep , or oxen , or ...
Strana 63
... English hearts believed that he was inspired , and that the spirit of prophecy spoke in his dying voice . The Abbat of Crowland was so near that he heard the passing - bell , as its sad sounds floated over the fens , telling all the ...
... English hearts believed that he was inspired , and that the spirit of prophecy spoke in his dying voice . The Abbat of Crowland was so near that he heard the passing - bell , as its sad sounds floated over the fens , telling all the ...
Strana 67
... English grape - wine much too sour and poor . Not so our lordly monks of Ely ! They sent the shipmen of Lynn to the Elbe , and to the Rhine , and to the Mosel , to bring them more gene- rous drink ; and they sent them to the south even ...
... English grape - wine much too sour and poor . Not so our lordly monks of Ely ! They sent the shipmen of Lynn to the Elbe , and to the Rhine , and to the Mosel , to bring them more gene- rous drink ; and they sent them to the south even ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
Abbat of Crowland Abbat of Ely Abbat Thurstan abbey albeit Ambleville arms bark battle battle of Hastings boats brother brought Cam-Bridge Camp of Refuge castle causeway cellarer chamberlain church cloister-monks cross Danes dark Dereham devils Duke William Elfric Ely Abbey England English eyes Father Adhelm feast fen country fenners fighting Geoffroy Girolamo of Salerno hall hand hast hath heard heart house of Ely isle of Ely Ivo Taille-Bois King Harold Knut Ladie Alftrude Ladie Lucia land Lanfranc lay-brothers look Lord Abbat Lord Hereward Lord of Brunn Lynn manor-house men-at-arms menestrel Mildred monks of Ely never noble Norman knights Normandie novice Peterborough Prior of Spalding quoth river sacrist Saint Albans Saint Etheldreda Saint Withburga Salernitan Saxon lords serfs shouted shrines side soldier soon Spalding Stamford succursal cell sword sword-bearer thee things Torauld town township traitors true Saxon unto voice Welland
Populárne pasáže
Strana vii - Dreams, that the soul of youth engage Ere Fancy has been quelled ; Old legends of the monkish page, Traditions of the saint and sage, Tales that have the rime of age, And chronicles of Eld.
Strana 33 - The heathen are sunk down in the pit that they made : in the net which they hid is their own foot taken.
Strana 195 - And we command that Christian men be not, on any account, for altogether too little, condemned to death : but rather let gentle punishments be decreed, for the benefit of the people; and let not be destroyed for little God's handy-work, and his own purchase which he dearly bought.
Strana 112 - ... and with elders, and also with various other trees, and with stones, and with many various delusions, with which men do much of what they should not.
Strana 196 - Let those who are noble, and those who are not, equally obtain their rights, according to the laws, from which no deviation shall be allowed, either from fear of me, or through favour to the powerful, or for the purpose of supplying my treasury. I want no money raised by injustice.
Strana 234 - Oh ! most noble and fair among women," said her Saxon advisers, "if thou wilt, thou canst restore the ancient honour of England, and be a pledge of reconciliation and friendship ; but if thou art obstinate in thy refusal, the enmity between the two races will be everlasting, and the shedding of human blood know no...
Strana 17 - This bote, it appears from another document, was to be sevenfold ; because " sevenfold are the gifts of the Holy Ghost, and seven are the degrees of ecclesiastical states and holy orders, and seven times should God's servants praise God daily in church, and for all Christian people earnestly intercede.
Strana 36 - ... mischief; Whereas the goodness of God : endureth yet daily? Thy tongue imagineth wickedness : and with lies thou cuttest like a sharp razor. Thou hast loved unrighteousness more than goodness : and to talk of lies more than righteousness. Thou hast loved to speak all words that may do hurt : O thou false tongue. Therefore shall God destroy thee for ever : he shall take thee, and pluck thee out of thy dwelling, and root thee out of the land of the living.
Strana 196 - And thrice a year let there be a ' burh-gemot,' and twice a ' shire-gemot ;' under penalty of the ' wite,' as is right, unless there be need oftener. And let there be present the bishop of the shire and the ealdorman, and there let both expound as well the law of God as the secular law.
Strana 188 - ... with the eagle swift to consume his prey; the greedy gos-hawk, and that grey beast the wolf of the weald. No slaughter yet was greater made e'er in this island, of people slain, before this same, with the edge of the sword; as the books inform us of the old historians; since hither came from the eastern shores the Angles and Saxons, over the broad sea...