The History of England, Volume 1T. Osborne, 1757 - Great Britain |
Common terms and phrases
Affer affiftance againſt alfo Alfred archbishop Armorica army battle becauſe Bede Befides Bernicia bishop Britain Britons Brompt Cæfar Canute caufed Cerdic chriftian church coafts confiderable conquefts crown Danes death defign defired duke Dunelm Eaft-Anglia earl Edward Egbert enemies England English Ethelred faid fame favour fays fecond feemed fend fent ferved fettled feven feveral fhall fhould fide fince firft firſt flain foldiers fome foon ftate ftill fubjects fucceeded fucceffor fuccefs fuch fuffered Gaul Goodwin Harold Hengift heptarchy hiftorians hiftory himſelf Huntingd ifland Ingulph intereft Kent king of Kent king of Mercia kingdom kingdom of Kent laft land mafter Malmsb meaſures moft monaftery monks moſt neceffary Northumberland obferved occafion paffed perfon Picts poffeffion poffible prefent prince Rapin reafon refolution refolved reft reign Romans Rome Saxons Scots Suffex thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe throne troops uſed victory Vortigern Weffex Weft whilft whofe
Popular passages
Page xxxiii - If dying mortals' doom they sing aright, No ghosts descend to dwell in dreadful night: No parting souls to grisly Pluto go, Nor seek the dreary, silent, shades below; But forth they fly, immortal in their kind, And other bodies in new worlds they find.
Page xxxiii - Children are to be brought up apart from their parents till they are fourteen years of age. " Money lent in this world will be repaid in the next.
Page 331 - This excellent prince complained bitterly that from the Humber to the Thames there was not a prieft...
Page 496 - Fathers were under the cloud, and all pafled through the fea ; and were all baptized unto Mofes in the cloud, and in the fea ; and did all eat the fame fpiritual meat, and did all drink the fame fpiritual drink ; (for they drank of that fpiritual Rock that followed them ; and that Rock was Chrift.
Page xii - ... progress in his majesty's reign. Charles I. ascended the throne in 1625. This was a most eventful reign in the history of the political literature of Britain, and indeed of the whole world. Here commenced, what had long been brewing in the mind of the nation, that bloody and severe struggle between the prerogatives of the crown, and the rights and privileges of the House of Commons. The first fruits of this struggle was the "Petition of Right...
Page 496 - His sovereign power, changed the bread into His body, and the wine into His blood, and thus gave himself to men as their spiritual food. "Take ye and eat," said He to His disciples, "this is my body ; take ye, and drink ; this is my blood.
Page xxxiii - And other bodies in new worlds they find. Thus life for ever runs its endlefs race, And like a line, death but divides the fpace, A flop which can but for a moment laft, A point between the future and the paft.
Page 47 - ... with her two daughters, rode up and down through the several squadrons of her army, whom she addressed to the following effect: " That it was not the first time the Britons had been victorious, under the conduct of their queen. That, for her part, she came not there as one descended of royal blood, to fight for empire or riches, but as one of the common people, to avenge the loss of their liberty, and the wrongs of herself and children.
Page 228 - Give alms of such things as you have, and behold all things are clean unto you.
Page 26 - ... the standardbearer of the tenth legion, having first invoked the gods for success, cried out aloud, ' Follow me, fellowsoldiers, unless you will betray the Roman eagle into the hands of the enemy : for my part, I am resolved to discharge my duty to Caesar and the commonwealth.