Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 39Leslie Stephen Macmillan, 1894 - Great Britain |
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Page 4
... Lord's harvest . But what availeth it to take away beads , pardons , pilgrimages , and such other like Popery , so long as two chief roots remain unpulled up ; whereof , so long as they remain , will spring up again all former ...
... Lord's harvest . But what availeth it to take away beads , pardons , pilgrimages , and such other like Popery , so long as two chief roots remain unpulled up ; whereof , so long as they remain , will spring up again all former ...
Page
... Lord MINSTER . ( Mar- JAMES EDWARD WILLIAM THEOBALD Lord | PHILIP Lord DE L'ISLE. EDWARD HENRY TRAFALGAR Lord DIGBY . GEORGE DOUGLAS Lord SUNDRIDGE . ( Duke of Argyll . ) MARTIN BLADEN Lord HAWKE . HENRY THOMAS Lord FOLEY . ARTHUR DE ...
... Lord MINSTER . ( Mar- JAMES EDWARD WILLIAM THEOBALD Lord | PHILIP Lord DE L'ISLE. EDWARD HENRY TRAFALGAR Lord DIGBY . GEORGE DOUGLAS Lord SUNDRIDGE . ( Duke of Argyll . ) MARTIN BLADEN Lord HAWKE . HENRY THOMAS Lord FOLEY . ARTHUR DE ...
Page 18
... Lord's first ap- pearance before Pilate , 307 sq . - The dismissal of our Lord to Herod , 310. — Second appearance before Pilate ; his efforts to set our Lord free , 311 sq.- Scourging of our Lord ; renewed efforts of Pilate , 314 sq ...
... Lord's first ap- pearance before Pilate , 307 sq . - The dismissal of our Lord to Herod , 310. — Second appearance before Pilate ; his efforts to set our Lord free , 311 sq.- Scourging of our Lord ; renewed efforts of Pilate , 314 sq ...
Page 72
Benjamin B. Warfield. ' Lord ' as our Lord is represented by Matthew as conceiving His relation to His followers as very an Appellation properly expressed by the term ' Lord . ' But the appellative use of the term of Jesus is ...
Benjamin B. Warfield. ' Lord ' as our Lord is represented by Matthew as conceiving His relation to His followers as very an Appellation properly expressed by the term ' Lord . ' But the appellative use of the term of Jesus is ...
Page 84
... Lord' is explained as a simple thanks to the 'Heavenly Father' who has made it possible for the movement to resist Museveni's army, which nevertheless 'is always armed from tooth to nail'. The rebel leader continues, 'While a big ...
... Lord' is explained as a simple thanks to the 'Heavenly Father' who has made it possible for the movement to resist Museveni's army, which nevertheless 'is always armed from tooth to nail'. The rebel leader continues, 'While a big ...
Common terms and phrases
ADAM OF USK afterwards appeared appointed April Atholl baron Baronage became bishop born Brit British British Museum brother buried Captain Castle Charles church College Cornwall council Covent Garden daugh daughter death Dict died Dublin Duke duke of Atholl Earl Edinburgh edit Edward Edward II eldest elected England English engraved estates EVESHAM father Fœdera France French Gent George graduated B.A. Henry Herefordshire Hist Ireland Irish James July June king king's Lady land Letters London Lord March married Memoirs ment Morgan Morley Morris Mortimer Morton Mowbray Mudge Murray Musgrave Myddelton Norfolk Oxford Papers Parl parliament Paston Letters portrait Prince printed Privy Council published returned Richard Richard III Robert Roger Royal Scotland Scots sent Sept Shropshire Sir John Society Thomas tion took translated Wales Welsh wife William William Mudge wrote
Popular passages
Page 159 - Verse, as may renew the wonted honour and esteem of our English tongue ; and it's the worth of these both English and Latin Poems, not the flourish of any prefixed...
Page 60 - He showed us his invention of writing, which was very ingenious ; also his wooden kalendar, which instructed him all by feeling ; and other pretty and useful inventions of mills, pumps, &c., and the pump he had erected that serves water to his garden, and to passengers, with an inscription, and brings from a filthy part of the Thames near it a most perfect and pure water.
Page 282 - There is one face of Farley, one face of Knight, one (but what a one it is!) of Listen; but Munden has none that you can properly pin down, and call his. When you think he has exhausted his battery of looks, in unaccountable warfare with your gravity, suddenly he sprouts out an entirely new set of features, like Hydra. He is not one, but legion. Not so much a comedian, as a company.
Page 269 - The ordinary means therefore to increase our wealth and treasure is by Foreign Trade, wherein we must ever observe this rule; to sell more to strangers yearly than we consume of theirs in value.
Page 340 - Had Prince Charles slept during the whole of the expedition, and allowed Lord George Murray to act for him according to his own judgment, there is every reason for supposing he would have found the crown of Great Britain on his head when he awoke.
Page 397 - Thistle, The; a dispassionate examine of the prejudice of Englishmen in general to the Scotch nation; and particularly of a late arrogant insult offered to all Scotchmen by a modern English journalist.
Page 357 - If you have any humanity, pray send clothing for your unfortunate prisoners in my possession. Leave it at a distance to be taken up for them, because I will admit of no contact for the future, but such as is hostile...
Page 278 - The strangest Adventure that ever happened : either in the ages passed or present. Containing a discourse concerning the successe of the King of Portugall, Dom Sebastian, from the time of his voyage into Affricke, when he was lost in the battell against the infidels in the yeare 1578, unto the sixt of January this present 1601.
Page 135 - ... men for affairs. He spoke both gracefully and weightily; he was eminently skilled in the law, had a vast understanding, and a prodigious memory; and those excellent talents with which Nature had furnished him, were improved by study and experience.
Page 32 - Johnson being asked his opinion of this Essay, answered, " Why, Sir, we shall have the man come forth again ; and as he has proved FalstafF to be no coward, he may prove lago to be a very good character.