History of England: From the Fall of Wolsey to the Death of Elizabeth, Τόμος 5

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C. Scribner and Company, 1867

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Σελίδα 364 - THE body of our Lord Jesus Christ, which was given for thee, preserve thy body and soul unto everlasting life ! Take and eat this in remembrance that Christ died for thee ; and feed on him in thy heart by faith with thanksgiving.
Σελίδα 116 - But London was never so ill as it is now. In times past men were full of pity and compassion, but now there is no pity; for in London their brother shall die in the streets for cold, he shall lie sick at the door between stock and stock, I cannot tell what to call it, and perish there for hunger: was there ever more unmercifulness in Nebo?
Σελίδα 84 - The officer violently thrust it in his face, and put it betwixt his hands, who, seeing the extremity, took the idol, and advisedly looking about, he cast it in the river, and said, ''Let our Lady now save herself; she is light enough; let her learn to swim.
Σελίδα 145 - And men must not think less to be received in part than in the whole, but in each of them the whole body of our Saviour Jesu Christ.
Σελίδα 362 - As the translation of the Bible bears upon it the imprint of the mind of Tyndal, so, while the Church of England remains, the image of Cranmer will be seen reflected on the calm surface of the Liturgy. The most beautiful portions of it are translations from the Breviary ; yet the same prayers translated by others would not be those which chime like church bells in the ears of the English child. The translations, and the addresses which are original, have the same silvery melody of language, and breathe...
Σελίδα 354 - After debating the matter from nine of the clock till three, the lords went together, and there weighing that the matter seemed only to touch their lives, although afterwards more inconvenience might have followed, and that men might think they did it of malice, acquitted him of high treason, and condemned him of felony, which he seemed to have confessed.
Σελίδα 116 - When any man died, they would bequeath great sums of money toward the relief of the poor. When I was a scholar in Cambridge myself, I heard very good report of London, and knew many that had relief of the rich men of London : but now I can hear no such good report, and yet I inquire of it, and hearken for it ; but now charity is waxen cold, none helpeth the scholar, nor yet the poor.
Σελίδα 76 - ... only giving the said slave bread and water or small drink and such refuse of meat as he shall think meet, cause the said slave to work...
Σελίδα 118 - ... too much. But let the preacher preach till his tongue be worn to the stumps, nothing is amended.
Σελίδα 468 - King's bed-side. Edward told him he hoped that he would not stand out alone, ' and be more repugnant to his will than all the rest of the council ; ' and at this last appeal the Archbishop yielded. Others signed with mental reservations, of which, in their subsequent defence of themselves, they made the most. Cranmer made no reservations, and pretended to none. When called to account by Mary, he said frankly that, when he signed at last, ' he did it unfeignedly and without...

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