The History of the Life of King Henry the Second: And the Age in which He Lived, in Five Books: to which is Prefixed a History of the Revolutions of England from the Death of Edward the Confessor to the Birth of Henry the Second...J. Dodsley, 1777 |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 18–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
Էջ 101
... whose wife was fifter to his , and the fair words of that emperor , who was skilful in the art of diffembling , made him at first neglect this caution ; yet when he found , during his march over the lands of V. Nicet . 1. i . the empire ...
... whose wife was fifter to his , and the fair words of that emperor , who was skilful in the art of diffembling , made him at first neglect this caution ; yet when he found , during his march over the lands of V. Nicet . 1. i . the empire ...
Էջ 161
... whose teftimony William particu- larly appealed , or any other credible perfon , would fwear , that the earl did not bring a royal mandate to elect him , he then might be confecrated , if he would himself take an oath , that he had not ...
... whose teftimony William particu- larly appealed , or any other credible perfon , would fwear , that the earl did not bring a royal mandate to elect him , he then might be confecrated , if he would himself take an oath , that he had not ...
Էջ 162
... whose inclination to mortify the house of Blois he well knew ; and wrote a letter to him against the arch- bishop , ftill more furious than those he had written to Innocent , calling that refpectable prelate a filthy and infamous perfon ...
... whose inclination to mortify the house of Blois he well knew ; and wrote a letter to him against the arch- bishop , ftill more furious than those he had written to Innocent , calling that refpectable prelate a filthy and infamous perfon ...
Էջ 175
... whose request he had come over , and who feemed to be greatly animated by his arrival . But they did not think it ad- vifeable to make any attempts against Ste- phen in England , till they should act in conjunction with the Scotch ...
... whose request he had come over , and who feemed to be greatly animated by his arrival . But they did not think it ad- vifeable to make any attempts against Ste- phen in England , till they should act in conjunction with the Scotch ...
Էջ 218
... whose party he never had left , or by fome other artifice not ex- plained in the history of those times , caused the two forts to be rafed . And yet this lord was esteemed a man of virtue ! Perhaps , finding himself fufpected , on his ...
... whose party he never had left , or by fome other artifice not ex- plained in the history of those times , caused the two forts to be rafed . And yet this lord was esteemed a man of virtue ! Perhaps , finding himself fufpected , on his ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbot Suger affiftance againſt alfo alſo Anjou archbishop archbishop of Canterbury army auctores barons becauſe bishop Blois BOOK caftle caſtle caufe cauſe Chron Chron.Norm crown defired duke duke of Aquitaine dutchy earl of Anjou earl of Glocefter earldom efcuage eleven hundred enemy England English epift Euftace fafe faid fame fays fecure feemed fent ferve fervice feveral fhould fide fiege firſt fome foon forces fovereign fpirit ftate ftill ftrength ftrong fub ann fubjects fubmitted fuccefs fuch fuffered fufficient fuppofed fupport fuprà Geoffry Gerv Gryffyth Guienne Henry Plantagenet Hift hiftorian himſelf honour huſband intereft king of France king of Scotland kingdom kingdom of England lefs lord Louis mafter Matilda meaſures moft moſt muſt neceffary Norman Normandy occafion paffed party perfon poffeffion pope prefent prince propofed raiſed reafon reign ſtate Stephen Suger thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion treaty uſe vaffals Wales Welsh whofe William Wincheſter
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Էջ 58 - Glocefter himlelf had no inconfiderable tincture of learning, and was the patron of all who excelled in it; qualities rare at all times in a nobleman of his high rank, but particularly in an age when knowledge and valour were thought incompatible, and not to be able to read was a mark of nobility. This truly great man...
Էջ 227 - Welch and the Scotch, calling themselves allies or auxiliaries to the Empress, but in reality enemies and destroyers of England, have broken their bounds, ravaged our borders, and taken from us whole provinces, which we never can hope to recover ; while instead of employing our united force...
Էջ 59 - Bleafterwards moft excellent in him; for his^15^' earheft impreflions were taken from his uncle, who, not only in learning, but in all other perfections, in magnanimity, valour, prudence, and all moral virtues, was the beft example that could be propofed to his imitation, Nor was it a fmall advantage to him that he was removed from the luxury of a court, and bred up among foldiers in the conftant...
Էջ 271 - Yet againft both thefe difficulties, uneafy as they were, he might have found a refource in the affection of his people. Henry the firft, in the beginning of his reign, was no lefs indebted to the clergy than he, nor was his title more clear: notwithftanding which he main.
Էջ 370 - ... in which their agility, fpirit, and impetuofity, made up what they wanted in weight and firmnefs : fo that, although they were eafily- overcome in a battle by regular troops, they were with great difficulty vanquished in a war.
Էջ 370 - ... of it was recent in their minds ; but it was frequently carried back, by a falfe fenfe of honour, even to very remote and traditional quarrels, in which any of their family had been ever engaged. For not only the nobles and gentry, but even the loweft among them, had each by heart his own genealogy, together with which he retained a...
Էջ 39 - Yet that hiftorian affirms, that, even in the latter years of his reign, broken as he was with inceffant toils, and heavy from a too corpulent habit of body, if any thing happened in any part of his kingdom, by which the royal majefty was hurt or offended, he never fuffered it to continue unchaftifed.
Էջ 374 - In other refpeils their manners fo nearly agreed, when that .author wrote, as to difcover the marks of a Celtic origin common to both. One is furprifed in obferving how abfolutely the Britons, after ~ their retreat into Wales, loft all the culture they had received from the Romans, and, inftead of refining the ancient inhabitants of that part of the ifland, relapfed themfelves into their rude and barbarous manners.
Էջ 293 - ... admiration ; a subject who died to save his king, or a king whose personal virtues could render his safety so dear to a subject whom he had not obliged by any extraordinary favours. The daughter of Hubert was educated by Henry, with all the affection that he owed to the memory of her father ; and, when she had attained to maturity, was honourably married to William de Longueville, a nobleman of great distinction, on condition of his taking the name of St. Clare, which the grateful Henry was desirous...
Էջ 372 - EngliuS j but moft of their gentry ftill continued to dwell in huts made of wattles, and fituated in folitudes, by the fides of the woods, as moft convenient for hunting and pafture, or for a retreat, in time of war. They had no gardens, nor orchards, nor any improvements about their...