The History of England: From the Earliest Times to the Death of George II.T. Davies, 1771 |
Từ bên trong sách
Kết quả 1-5 trong 24
Trang 24
... raise all the conveniencies of life , inftructed them in the arts of agriculture , and , in order to pro- tect them in their peaceable poffeffions , he drew a rampart , and fixed a train of garrisons between them and their northern ...
... raise all the conveniencies of life , inftructed them in the arts of agriculture , and , in order to pro- tect them in their peaceable poffeffions , he drew a rampart , and fixed a train of garrisons between them and their northern ...
Trang 34
... raised himself to the fu- preme command by the murder of his prede- ceffor . This step was only productive of fresh calamities . Vortigern , instead of exerting what strength yet remained in the kingdom , only fet himself to look about ...
... raised himself to the fu- preme command by the murder of his prede- ceffor . This step was only productive of fresh calamities . Vortigern , instead of exerting what strength yet remained in the kingdom , only fet himself to look about ...
Trang 54
... raise the fum , he impofed a tax of a penny on each houfe poffeffed of thirty pence a year . This impofition being afterwards generally levied throughout the kingdom , went by the name of Peter - pence , and in fucceeding times gave ...
... raise the fum , he impofed a tax of a penny on each houfe poffeffed of thirty pence a year . This impofition being afterwards generally levied throughout the kingdom , went by the name of Peter - pence , and in fucceeding times gave ...
Trang 57
... to make a rapid proficiency ; and he foon acquired fuch accomplishments , both in arts and arms , as raised him great- ly fuperior to any of his countrymen at home . 2 HISTORY OF ENGLAND . 57 ground-work of those which were afterwards ...
... to make a rapid proficiency ; and he foon acquired fuch accomplishments , both in arts and arms , as raised him great- ly fuperior to any of his countrymen at home . 2 HISTORY OF ENGLAND . 57 ground-work of those which were afterwards ...
Trang 62
... raise the people above mere barbarians ; but yet loft all their native fplendor in the transplantation . The Eng- lifh , at this time , might be confidered as po- lite , if compared to the naked Britons at the invafion of Cæfar . The ...
... raise the people above mere barbarians ; but yet loft all their native fplendor in the transplantation . The Eng- lifh , at this time , might be confidered as po- lite , if compared to the naked Britons at the invafion of Cæfar . The ...
Ấn bản in khác - Xem tất cả
Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
affiftance againſt alfo alſo archbishop of Canterbury army barons Becket biſhop Britons brother caftle Canterbury caſtle caufe cauſe Chriftianity church clergy command confequence confiderable conqueft crown Danes death defired deſtroyed dominions duke of Normandy earl Edgar Atheling Elfrida encreaſed endeavoured enemy England Engliſh eſtabliſhed Ethelwald faid fame favour fecure feemed feized fent ferved feveral fhewed fhould fide fince firft firſt flain fome foon ftate ftill fubjects fubmiffion fubmit fucceeded fuccefs fuch fufficient Henry Heptarchy himſelf horſe ib.-his interefts invafion iſland king of France king of Scotland king's kingdom laft land Leiceſter meaſure moft monarch moſt narch Norman Normandy obliged occafion oppofed oppofition oppoſe perfon poffeffed poffeffion pope prelate pretenfions prifoner prince promiſed puniſh purpoſe raiſed refentment refiftance refolved refuſed reign Richard Romans Saxon ſeemed ſeveral ſome ſtate ſtill thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand throne tion uſed Vortigern whofe whoſe William Wincheſter
Đoạn trích phổ biến
Trang 198 - Above a hundred and forty young noblemen of the principal families of England and Normandy were lost on this occasion. A butcher of Rouen was the only person on board who escaped ;' he clung to the mast, and was taken up next morning by fishermen.
Trang 22 - Suetonius in a great and decisive battle, where 80,000 of the Britons are said to have perished; and Boadicea herself, rather than fall into the hands of the enraged victor, put an end to her own life by poison.
Trang 45 - Essex, Middlesex, and part of Hertfordshire. This kingdom, which •was dismembered from that of Kent, formed the fifth Saxon principality founded in Britain. The kingdom of Mercia was the sixth which was established by these fierce invaders, comprehending all the middle counties, from the banks of the Severn to the frontiers of the two last named kingdoms.
Trang 297 - What have you done to me?" replied coolly the prisoner: "you killed with your own hands my father, and my two brothers; and you intended to have hanged myself: I am now in your power, and you may take revenge by inflicting...
Trang 335 - No freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or dispossessed of his free tenement and liberties, or outlawed, or banished, or anywise hurt or injured, unless by the legal judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land...
Trang 316 - The next gradation of papal sentences was to absolve John's subjects from their oaths of fidelity and allegiance, and to declare every one excommunicated who had any commerce with him in public or in private ; at his table, in his council, or even in private conversation : And this sentence was accordingly, with all imaginable solemnity, pronounced against him.
Trang 198 - Henry entertained hopes for three days, that his son had put into some distant port of England; but when certain intelligence of the calamity was brought to him, he fainted away; and it was remarked that he never after was seen to smile, nor ever recovered his wonted cheerfulness.
Trang 311 - ... implied in it. He begged him to consider seriously the form of the rings, their number, their matter, and their colour. Their form, he said, being round, shadowed out eternity, which had neither beginning nor end ; and he ought thence to learn his duty of aspiring from earthly objects to heavenly, from things temporal to things eternal.
Trang 383 - At last, overcome by the cares of government and the infirmities of age, he visibly declined, and he expired at St.
Trang 320 - III. and his successors, the Kingdom of England and all other prerogatives of my crown. I will hereafter hold them as the Pope's vassal.