Education in Early England: Some Notes Used as Forewords to a Collection of Treatises on "Manners & Meals in Olden Time" for the Early English Text SocietyN. Trübner & Company, 1867 - 4 páginas |
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Página vi
... Letters , v . ii . p . 3 ) . " Our barons be so bolde , Into a mouse hole they wold Runne away and creep Like a mainy of sheep : Dare not look out a dur For drede of the maystife cur , For drede of the boucher's dog " For and this curre ...
... Letters , v . ii . p . 3 ) . " Our barons be so bolde , Into a mouse hole they wold Runne away and creep Like a mainy of sheep : Dare not look out a dur For drede of the maystife cur , For drede of the boucher's dog " For and this curre ...
Página viii
... Letters , by Staunton , in his Great Schools of England , p . 179-80 . 1 " And therfore do I the more lament that soch [ hard ] wittes commonlie be either kepte from learning by fond fathers , or bet from learning by lewde schole ...
... Letters , by Staunton , in his Great Schools of England , p . 179-80 . 1 " And therfore do I the more lament that soch [ hard ] wittes commonlie be either kepte from learning by fond fathers , or bet from learning by lewde schole ...
Página xi
... letters up to that period , and the general ignorance of our upper classes were , says Professor Brewer , the reason why the whole government of the country was in the hands of ecclesiastics . Even in Henry the Eighth's Item ...
... letters up to that period , and the general ignorance of our upper classes were , says Professor Brewer , the reason why the whole government of the country was in the hands of ecclesiastics . Even in Henry the Eighth's Item ...
Página xii
... Letters , before and about 1500 A.D. , is probably well represented by the opinion of one of them stated by . Pace , in his Prefatory Letter to Colet , prefixed to the former's De Fructu " . 1 The exceptions must have been many and ...
... Letters , before and about 1500 A.D. , is probably well represented by the opinion of one of them stated by . Pace , in his Prefatory Letter to Colet , prefixed to the former's De Fructu " . 1 The exceptions must have been many and ...
Página xiii
... letters ! all learned men are beggars : even Erasmus , the most learned of all , is a beggar ( as I hear ) , and in a certain letter of his calls τήν κατάρατον πενίαν ( that is , execrable poverty ) his wife , and vehemently complains ...
... letters ! all learned men are beggars : even Erasmus , the most learned of all , is a beggar ( as I hear ) , and in a certain letter of his calls τήν κατάρατον πενίαν ( that is , execrable poverty ) his wife , and vehemently complains ...
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Education in Early England: Some Notes Used As Forewords to A Collection of ... Frederick James Furnivall Sin vista previa disponible - 2008 |
Términos y frases comunes
abbot Ascham Bishop Boke boys Cambridge canons Cardinal Cathedral churche Chaucer's Coll College copies coson Court divers Duke Earl Early English Text edited England English Text Society Erasmus Eton Extra Series F. J. FURNIVALL father Frederic Madden French fyndynge gentlemen Grammar Schools Hall Harl hath haue Hazlitt Henry VIII Henxmen hime honour Household houses John of Salisbury King King's knight Labour Lady Latin learning lerne letter London Lord manners master monastery monks Morris noble Oxford Paston Paston Letters Percy Folio Piers Plowman Poems poor printed Queen rich Richard Richard Busby says scholars scole sent servants Sir John Society's sonne sons St Paul's St Paul's School Statutes sunt taught theyre Thomas Treatises tutor tyme University unto Vacarius volume W. W. Skeat WHEATLEY William William Grocyn Wolsey words Wright writing yong young youth
Pasajes populares
Página xii - I shall desire you, because ye can speak French, to take the pains to go down into the hall to encounter and to receive them, according to their estates, and to conduct them into this chamber, where they shall see us, and all these noble personages sitting merrily at our banquet, desiring them to sit down with us, and to take part of our fare and pastime.
Página lii - ... giveth his gifts both of learning, and other perfections in all sciences, unto all kinds and states of people indifferently.
Página lii - I grant," replied the Archbishop, " much of your meaning herein as " needful in a commonwealth : but yet utterly to exclude " the ploughman's son and the poor man's son from the " benefit of learning, as though they were unworthy to have " the gifts of the Holy Ghost bestowed upon them, as well "as upon others, is as much...
Página xiv - The want of affection in the English is strongly manifested towards their children ; for after having kept them at home till they arrive at the age of seven or nine years...
Página xii - Then spake my Lord Chamberlain unto them in French, declaring my Lord Cardinal's mind, and they rounding him again in the ear, my Lord Chamberlain said to my Lord Cardinal, 'Sir, they confess,' quoth he, " that among them there is such a noble personage, whom if your grace can appoint him from the other, he is contented to disclose himself, and to accept your place most worthily.
Página vii - For when I am in presence either of father or mother, whether I speak, keep silence, sit, stand, or go, eat, drink, be merry or sad, be...
Página xiv - ... their patrons, and the boys make the best marriages they can, and, assisted by their patrons, not by their fathers, they also open a house and strive diligently by this means to make some fortune for themselves; whence it proceeds that, having no hope of their paternal inheritance, they all become so greedy of gain that they feel no shame in asking, almost "for the love of God...
Página xiv - And these are called apprentices, and during that time they perform all the most menial offices ; and few are born who are exempted from this fate, for every one, however rich he may be, sends away his children into the houses of others, whilst he, in return, receives those of strangers into his own. And on inquiring their reason for this severity, they answered that they did it in order that their children might learn better manners.
Página xlvi - Item. It is ordained & assented, That he or she which used to labour at the Plough and Cart, or other Labour or Service of Husbandry till they be of the Age of Twelve Years, that from thenceforth they shall abide at the same Labour, without being put to any Mystery or Handicraft...