The Scholar's History of England ...

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Page 633 - Ramsay's Latin Prose Composition. Fourth edition. Vol. I : Syntax and Exercises. 4s. 6d. Or Part 1, First Year's Course, Is. 6d. ; Part 2, Second Year's Course, Is. 6d. ; Part 3, Syntax and Appendix, 2s. 6d. Key (see note below) to the volume, 5s.
Page 633 - Crown 8vo buckram extra, 6s. net ; on India paper, 7s. 6d. net. Musa Clauda. Being translations into Latin Elegiac Verse, by SG OWEN and JS PHILLIMORE.
Page 78 - Beaufort had been the mainstay of his house ; for fifty years he had held the strings of English policy, and • done his best to maintain the welfare and honour of the nation. That he was ambitious, secular, little troubled with scruples, apt to make religious persecution a substitute for religious life and conversation ; that he was imperious, impatient of control, ostentatious and greedy of honour, — these are faults which weigh very lightly against a great politician, if they be all that can...
Page 513 - For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office ; so we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another.
Page 633 - Fox and Bromley's Models and Exercises in Unseen Translation. Revised edition. Extra fcap 8vo. 5s. 6d. A Key (see note below) giving references for the passages contained in the above, 6d. net. Latin and Greek Verse Lee- Warner's Helps and Exercises for Latin Elegiacs.
Page 631 - In three Parts. Third edition. Part I. Anecdotes from Grecian and Roman History. Is. 6d. Part II. Omens and Dreams : Beauties of Nature. Is. 6d. Part III. Rome's Rule of her Provinces. Is. 6d. Parts I-III, 4s. 6d. Extracts from Livy, with notes and maps, by H. LEE-WARNER and TW GOULD.
Page 170 - Justice, speaking in the name of them all, " after sadde communication and mature deliberation hadde amonge theim," that " they ought not to aunswere to that question, for it hath not ben used aforetyme that the Justicez shuld in eny wyse determine the Privelegge of this high Court of Parlement ; for it is so high and so mighty in his nature that it may make lawe, and that that is lawe it may make noo lawe ; and the determination and knowlegge of that Privilegge belongeth to the Lordes of the Parlement,...

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