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"doth" Definitions
  1. third person singular present indicative of do1.
"doth" Synonyms
"doth" Antonyms
overturns contravenes invalidates nullifies repeals undoes abrogates annuls negates overthrows quashes quells reverses stymies subverts undermines vetoes voids abolishes cancels idles bludges bums dallies dawdles dillydallies fritters lazes loafs lolls lollygags lounges sits back slacks slouches slummocks stagnates vegetates does nothing lazes about impedes hampers disrupts hinders inhibits stifles trammels bars blocks cripples cumbers curbs dampens derails encumbers fetters hamstrings handicaps interferes with abandons forgets aborts axes(US) ceases discards discontinues dispenses with ditches drops dumps ends forgoes forsakes ignores kicks leaves passes renounces delays defers adjourns postpones remits reschedules respites stays suspends tables puts off fails miscarries flops founders misfires misses underperforms bombs flunks falls short dissatisfies fails to satisfy contradicts counters disconfirms opposes confutes controverts differs disputes gainsays refutes belies clashes with conflicts with flies in the face of makes a nonsense of runs counter to says the opposite of omits overlooks skips bypasses disregards avoids escapes eschews neglects passes up cedes waives yields blows off holds off puts on the back burner remains remains behind stays behind stays put sticks around takes a rain check bans deters disallows forbids prohibits disapproves prevents stops disadvises disavows discourages precludes proscribes denies restricts countermands declines overrules spoils damages ravages ruins trashes wrecks blemishes compromises desecrates destroys devastates wastes defaces despoils debases defiles demolishes disfigures hurts uglifies simplifies minimalizes declutters streamlines strips dejunks denudes tidies abates cleans out curtails diminishes lessens minimises(UK) minimizes(US) reduces wanes flounders struggles fizzles collapses falters staggers bumbles dithers fumbles peters out helps aids assists serves gives assistance to dishevels disarranges disorders tousles discomposes disorganizes jumbles shuffles disarrays disturbs hashes musses upsets messes up mixes up rests relaxes unwinds chills out eases off eases up has a break rejects refuses dismisses repels rebuffs spurns turns down

499 Sentences With "doth"

How to use doth in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "doth" and check conjugation/comparative form for "doth". Mastering all the usages of "doth" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Nothing of him that doth fade, / But doth suffer a sea-change / Into something rich and strange," Ariel sings.
He has been pitched in battle for a fortnight, and has a king's thirst for the frosty brew that doth might brow for doth!
If I insisted that I really was having a great time, I was a lady who doth protest too much (men never seem to doth too much in this regard).
CONCORD, N.H. – The lady doth protest too much, he thinks.
The Bachelor in Paradise lady doth protest like, a lot.
But it would seem the poet doth protest too much.
" His best guess: "Because the heat of the sun doth dissolve.
" For my common sense, Mr. Kavanaugh "doth protest too much, methinks.
" As Shakespeare might have said, Trump "doth protest too much, methinks.
Some Republicans hold out hope that the speaker doth protest too much.
"She doth protest too much, methinks" is often misunderstood as a comment by Hamlet.
That is the Lord's choir, who doth herald the coming of the Premier League.
It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock The meat it feeds on.
Therefore love moderately; long love doth so;Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
"One rotten test doth not a school year spoil," his fellow student Francine assures him.
The lady doth protest too much, consider how hard she's egging the whole thing on.
" Romney responded to that tweet with another tweet: "Methinks the Donald doth protest too much.
As much as he doth protest the king's decision, Bran shows no signs of backing down.
Democrats, ruminating upon what meat doth our Caesar feed, may be dumb, but they're not stupid.
Every other day of the week, America's complaint is that the blacks doth protest too much.
What astonished, flearing, and confused mumps and mows doth this dotage stir up in our visages!
After that, once the data cap doth spilleth over a third time, it's $10 per 5003GB.
It also seems as though Brady doth protest too much, methinks, regarding who actually picked out the costume.
To be clear, he was not there to praise The Bachelor, which he doth abhor; just the spinoff.
There is a reason that "doth protest too much" — originally attributed to Hamlet's mother — has become a cliché.
" The prankster's email was sent using a Gmail account with the subject "The Fool doth think he is wise.
And I alone sit ling'ring here; Their very memory is fair and bright, And my sad thoughts doth clear.
All Hallows Even doth approach, and the only thing I fear is a lack of shareable, list-based content.
Perhaps that's just another item on the list of things Streep didn't know, or else she doth protest too much.
This last episode showed Jon Snow's Avengers surrounded by thousands of the undead and, lo, a long battle doth ensue.
Things are so emphatically "very busy and very happy" in Highbury, that it might seem the characters doth protest too much.
In a most unprecedented (and unexpected) comeback, we doth proclaim that the royal and ever-archetypal puka shell necklace hath returned.
And say, doth our star-spangled banner yet wave O'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave?
When it comes to their confident assertions that Sanders will never be the nominee, methinks the lady doth protest too much.
You might be tempted to think that Apple doth protest too much, but there have been genuine questions about that very issue.
With all that repetition, you can't help but feel that band doth protest too much — maybe they do want to wake up 22.
Knife hits are for the certain type of refined stoner or high school kid who doth care not (or possess not) for glass.
When winds and tempests fly, When floods and fires fail, As their wake doth meadow and fen, Tis the man-child's heart that craves.
But methinks not only that the president doth protest too much about his "Nuclear Button," but also that many commentators are still missing the point.
Though they doth protest at the characterization, they have clearly picked the eventual and massive payday over the very ugly road it took to get there.
At the risk of being the columnist who doth protest too much, let me just say this: My climate column was not, repeat not, about policy.
It's just, she really wants you to know that she's over the whole "snake" incident, so she's embracing it, you see.. The lady doth protest a lot!
Online, even the people who deny that daddy issues have anything to do with calling their partner "daddy" during sex have an air of doth-protesting-too-much.
When one's attacks begin to have an aura of "doth protest too much," while the other side formulates a counter-narrative that resonates, this holds even more true.
Bryan Bishop, The Red Right Hands (seventh place, 165 points) So, there's no way around it: in this season of the Game of Game of Thrones, my house doth tank.
Trump may try to dismiss the airing of this DonateGate as the work of "sleazy New York Democrats," as he tweeted on Thursday, but the tweeter doth protest too much.
Florentino Perez doth arrive on a winged griffin, come to 'swoop' down upon Kylian Mbappe, snatch him up in the beast's wicked talons and carry him off over the foaming seas.
Whatever happened, Durant at least acknowledged that something did in fact happen: And based on the doth protesting too much from this account, we might be looking at KD's secret account right here:
Though they only appeared together in 12 episodes, their waistcoats and sensible jackets had a big impact on me as a young girl who doth protest too much to herself about her sexuality.
Even Isaac Newton once wrote: Doth not the Refraction of Light proceed from the different density of this Æthereal Medium in different places, the Light receding always from the denser parts of the Medium?
Today, on the anniversary of Reagan&aposs Brandenburg Gate speech where he said tear down this wall, I doth my cap to my White House former colleagues to choose June 19533th as a big day.
In a bid to seem more artistically legit, Aussie act 5 Seconds of Summer maintain they're a rock band, not a boy band, though many media outlets think the punk-lite brochachos doth protest too much.
No refuge could save the hireling and slaveFrom the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave,And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth waveO'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
John Keene (Taylor John Smith), Natalie's older brother, is displaying some suspicious behavior, and all the public moping he's been doing about his sister — even before her death is confirmed — suggests that perhaps he doth protest too much.
I've lived in Washington for 303 years and I've never worked in the New York business world, but I still feel relatively comfortable believing that Mooch doth protest too much about how terrible the nation's capital is. 3.
Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE, who has closely reviewed how the department handled the Russia investigation, is under fire for shifting the administrative review to a criminal inquiry and allowing the prosecutor presiding over the inquiry, John DurhamJohn DurhamDemocrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation Schiff: Barr 'weaponizing' DOJ 'to go after the president's enemies' Democrats must question possible political surveillance MORE, to subpoena for witness testimony and documents, put together a grand jury and file charges.
Listen, for starters, to the way he phrases "which of you shall we say doth love us most?" as Lear carves his kingdom among his daughters: A slight upturn on the word "most" implies that even he can't believe he is asking so hateful a question.
Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE's recent speech on religious liberty delivered at Notre Dame University has stirred controversy in some circles.
With unquestionably danceable songs like "The Geometry of Wounds" and the club favorite, "Rip Doth Thy Scarlet Claws", Qual caught the attention of sullen goths worldwide and also the likes of techno artist Ancient Methods, who often seizes the opportunity to curate such unexpected tracks in his industrial-infused hard techno DJ sets.
Barr has tapped Connecticut U.S. Attorney John DurhamJohn DurhamImpeachment tests Barr-Trump relationship Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation Schiff: Barr 'weaponizing' DOJ 'to go after the president's enemies' MORE to lead the investigation; Durham is well regarded, which has to some extent insulated the Justice Department from criticism.
The memorandum of the call shows that Trump repeatedly pressured Zelensky to work with Giuliani and Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE to investigate Biden.
The same could be said in watching key Democrats "protest too much" to the investigation by United States Attorney John DurhamJohn DurhamDemocrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation Schiff: Barr 'weaponizing' DOJ 'to go after the president's enemies' Democrats must question possible political surveillance MORE into the origins of the Russia probe.
Multiple Trump administration officials came to pay their respects as Cummings laid in state outside the House chamber, including Vice President Pence and Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE.
While anyone who's had the pleasure of a Sunday evening dancing in the company of Janson throughout his Panorama Bar residency (or elsewhere), will surely think he doth protest too much, in an industry awash in earnest, self-serious philosophy, the passionate but tongue-in-cheek approach established by TCK allows the music to speak for itself.
You got my heart you got my soul You got the silver you got the gold You got the diamonds from the mine Well that's all right, it'll buy some time —Mick Jagger & Keith Richards, "You Got the Silver" Plate sin with gold, And the strong lance of justice hurtless brakes; Arm it in rags, a pigmy's straw doth pierce it.
"These are some of the most dangerous jobs in law enforcement, and I am grateful for the sacrifice of those who serve," Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE said in the release.
"These are some of the most dangerous jobs in law enforcement, and I am grateful for the sacrifice of those who serve," Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE said in the release.
He responded with a kind of "I DON'T SEE RACE!!" explanation, noted the awards are decided via popular vote, and pointed towards the subjectivity of art and the supposed diversity of the Academy, but it kinda feels like the lady doth protest too much: Read the full interview, where Portnow also discusses Frank Ocean's boycott of this year's ceremony, here.
Not only can he review privileged material within the executive branch, but Durham enlisted Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE to secure unreviewed evidence held by foreign countries involving key players in the original probe.
Giving life to "thou doth protest too much," President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE insists at every turn that there was no collusion between his campaign and the Russians.
Trump also references a conspiracy theory related to Ukraine's alleged involvement in the 2016 hack of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) server and says he will put Zelensky in contact with Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE and Giuliani.
As the Intercept's Jon Schwarz reported shortly after Kaepernick's first protest before a preseason game in August, the oft-forgotten third verse of Key's 1814 masterpiece "literally celebrates the murder of African Americans": No refuge could save the hireling and slave From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave, And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
Trump, who was joined at Monday's event by Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE as well as Department of Homeland Security officials and a handful of members of Congress, began his remarks by taking a victory lap following his administration's successful military raid that resulted in the death of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi over the weekend.
While the special counsel declined to say if Trump obstructed justice, Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE and then-Deputy Attorney General Rod RosensteinRod RosensteinDemocrats ask court to force DOJ's hand on Mueller grand jury materials Washington celebrates diplomacy — and baseball — at Meridian Ball Comey: Mueller 'didn't succeed in his mission because there was inadequate transparency' MORE concluded Trump had not done so.
In peace there's nothing so becomes a man As modest stillness and humility: But when the blast of war blows in our ears, Then imitate the action of the tiger; Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood, Disguise fair nature with hard-favour'd rage; Then lend the eye a terrible aspect; Let pry through the portage of the head Like the brass cannon; let the brow o'erwhelm it As fearfully as doth a galled rock O'erhang and jutty his confounded base, Swill'd with the wild and wasteful ocean.
Multiple current and former Trump administration officials came to pay their respects as Cummings lay in state, including Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard PenceNational security adviser, Commerce Secretary to represent Trump at Asian summit Pence: 'I don't take it as a foregone conclusion that the House will vote to impeach' Pence: Trump's decision to remove troops from Syria 'had no impact' on al-Baghdadi mission MORE, Attorney General William BarrWilliam Pelham BarrPETA asks DOJ to stop conducting training that harms animals New York medical examiner stands by assessment of Epstein death Democrats doth protest too much against the Durham investigation MORE and former Acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan.
Yet I own, it doth increase it, and not so only, but dispraise doth diminish it.
This is followed by an explanation: :Even as the waxe doth feede and quenche the flame, :So, loue giues life; and love, dispaire doth giue: :The godlie loue, doth louers croune with fame: :The wicked loue, in shame dothe make them liue. :Then leaue to loue, or loue as reason will, :For, louers lewde doe vainlie langishe still.Whitney, Geoffrey.
Nothing doth countervail a faithful friend, and his excellency is unvaluable.
Thus doth benignant Heaven lighten the heavy pressure of toilful industry!
Thus doth benignant Heaven lighten the heavy pressure of toilful industry!
Him despair doth cause to lie, Who both lived and died true.
Assuetude of things hurtful doth make them lose their force to hurt.
Doth jealousy smile so benignantly and offer its house to the bride?
So doth the geometrician and arithmetician, in their diverse sorts of quantities.
The plasterer doth make his figures by addition, and the carver by substraction.
O noble, prudent folk in happier case! Your dice-box doth not tumble out ambsace.
Then his food doth taste savourily, then his divertisements and recreations have a lively gustfulness.
An empiric oftentimes, and a silly chirurgeon, doth more strange cures than a rational physician.
And otherwhile, yt which hee carveth, doth not like him to whom it is geven.
This blessedness then, doth it remain in the circumcision only or in the uncircumcision also?
The diligent pilot in a dangerous tempest doth not attend the unskilful words of the passenger.
Much dining-out doth breed dyspepsia, and atrabilious views are apt to be a leetle lop-sided.
This doctrine doth abolish quite the doctrine of the law, of repentaunce,..and commaundeth a mammering doubtfulnesse.
Dreadly, in sooth, dreadly doth the wise augur move me, who approve not, nor am able to deny.
Dreadly, in sooth, dreadly doth the wise augur move me, who approve not, nor am able to deny.
Thus doth he annihilate himself, that he may omnify his Master, that Christ may be all in all.
Ale muste haue these properties, it muste be fresshe and cleare, it > muste not be ropy, nor smoky, nor it must haue no wefte nor tayle. Ale > shulde not be dronke vnder.v.[5] dayes olde .... Barly malte maketh better > ale than Oten malte or any other corne doth ... Beere is made of malte, of > hoppes, and water; it is a naturall drynke for a doche [Dutch] man, and nowe > of late dayes [recently] it is moche vsed in Englande to the detryment of > many Englysshe men ... for the drynke is a colde drynke. Yet it doth make a > man fatte, and doth inflate the bely, as it doth appere by the doche mennes > faces and belyes.
But what specially the byshop spake of the Sacramēt and the masse, this deponent doth not nowe certainly remember.
And because the proceeding by interrogatories doth in my opinion much dilucidate things... I will make use of that artifice.
A trustier gloss than thou canst give From all wise scrolls demonstrative, The sea doth sigh and the wind sing.
The mother expects a joyous reunion, in some versions preparing a celebratory feast for them, which, as subjects of Death, they are unable to eat. They consistently remind her that they are no longer living; they are unable to sleep as well and must depart at the break of day. :"The cock doth craw, the day doth daw, :The channerin worm doth chide; :Gin we be mist out o our place, :A sair pain we maun bide." The most popular versions in America have a different tone and an overtly religious nature.
Who deserts his father's race, seeks the black blood to debase, which thro' his own veins doth chase, he be accurst!
When her mother presented the child to the abbess, Euphrasia took up an image of Christ and kissed it, saying, "By vow I consecrate myself to Christ." Her mother replied, "Lord Jesus Christ, receive this child under your special protection. You alone doth she love and seek: to you doth she recommend herself." Soon after, Euphrasia's mother became ill and died.
They asked who should > keep her company if all they went; she said Mrs. Owen should keep her > company at dinner; the same tale doth Picto, who doth dearly love her, > confirm. Certainly, my Lord, as little while as I have been here, I have > heard divers tales of her that maketh me judge her to be a strange woman of > mind.Skidmore 2010 pp. 381–382 Mrs.
José Doth de Oliveira (1 March 1938 – 26 November 2017) was a Brazilian Roman Catholic prelate. Born in Pedra Branca, Ceará, Doth de Oliveira was ordained to the priesthood in 1964. He served as the Bishop of Iguatu from 2000 until he resigned in 2009. He died due to complications from Alzheimer's disease on 26 November 2017 in Pedra Branca, at the age of 79.
2 Unlimited is a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by two Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Anita Doth. In the early 1990s, Ray Slijngaard (the soon-to-become rapper of 2 Unlimited) had been asked to write rap lyrics for a tune written by Belgian producers J.P. de Coster and Phil Wilde. Ray also wrote a chorus to be sung by a female vocalist, for which he asked Doth to sing the lyrics. The demo was presented to de Coster and Wilde, leading to Doth joining 2 Unlimited, and "Get Ready For This" was produced as their first single.
Tune of BWV 648 Tune: "Meine Seele erhebt den Herren" ("My soul doth magnify the Lord"), a German variant of the tonus peregrinus or ninth psalm tone.
Thus wisdom wishes to appear most bright When it doth tax itself, as these black masks Proclaim an enshield beauty ten times louder Than beauty could, displayed.
Doth it seem good to thee that thou shouldst calumniate me, and oppress me, the work of thy own hands, and help the counsel of the wicked?
In 2014, 2 Unlimited gave concerts at ten festivals that together made up Acceleration 2014, which combined top class car and bike racing with music and entertainment. On 20 April 2016, 2 Unlimited announced that Anita Doth would be leaving the band at the end of 2016 to embark on a solo career. Doth was to be replaced by another singer, whose identity was not revealed right away.
Anita Doth (born 28 December 1971) is a Dutch singer and songwriter best known as the front person of the duo 2 Unlimited, along with rapper Ray Slijngaard.
Alma Mater > Lookout Mountainr o'er us guarding, > Ceaseless watch doth keep. > In the valley stands our college, > where the shadows creep. > > :Refrain: :Chattanooga, Chattanooga! > :Loud the anthem swell.
10 The hills were covered with the shadow of it, and the boughs thereof were like the goodly cedars. 11 She sent out her boughs unto the sea, and her branches unto the river. 12 Why hast thou then broken down her hedges, so that all they which pass by the way do pluck her? 13 The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
The delinquent submitted to the "Committee for Compounding with Delinquents" a signed declaration of his revenue and assets, which ended with wording such as: This is a true particular of the estate he doth desire to compound with this Honourable Committee for, wherein he doth submit himself to the fine to be imposed (partial transcript of declaration to the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents of Francis Choke of Avington, Berkshire, dated 1646).
These twin urns shall hold Not > remnant ashes but their twofold birth; For sacrificial strife Is generation. > So doth mould The Potter’s hand the slow, unplastic earth. The shouting > swells.
Q. 24: How doth Christ execute the office of a prophet? :Christ executeth the office of a prophet, in revealing to us, by his word and Spirit, the will of God for our salvation. Q. 25: How doth Christ execute the office of a priest? :Christ executeth the office of a priest, in his once offering up of himself a sacrifice to satisfy divine justice, and reconcile us to God, and in making continual intercession for us.
Lorenzo goes on to describe the calming effect of Orpheus's music on wild beasts: Since naught so stockish, hard, and full of rage But music for the time doth change his nature.
CHAPTER 1.1–3 How doth the city sit solitary, That was full of people! How is she become as a widow? She that was great among the nations. And princess among the provinces.
"You Are Old, Father William" is a poem by Lewis Carroll that appears in his 1865 book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. It is recited by Alice in Chapter 5, "Advice from a Caterpillar" (Chapter 3 in the original manuscript). Alice informs the Caterpillar that she has previously tried to repeat "How Doth the Little Busy Bee" and has had it all come wrong as "How Doth the Little Crocodile". The Caterpillar asks her to repeat "You Are Old, Father William", and she recites.
Shrewsbury's agents visited Bothal, and described the house as 'a castle battled, and not unlike to Nether Haddon where Master John Manners doth dwell.'Dynfnallt Owen, ed. (1980). HMC 58, Manuscripts Marquess of Bath., vol.
As usual, Elizabeth lacked control over her commanders once they were abroad. "Where he is, or what he doth, or what he is to do," she wrote of Essex, "we are ignorant".Haigh, 143–144.
By the 19th century, punctuation in the western world had evolved "to classify the marks hierarchically, in terms of weight". Cecil Hartley's poem identifies their relative values: The stop point out, with truth, the time of pause A sentence doth require at ev'ry clause. At ev'ry comma, stop while one you count; At semicolon, two is the amount; A colon doth require the time of three; The period four, as learned men agree. The use of punctuation was not standardised until after the invention of printing.
Sequel William Shakespeare's The Empire Striketh Back Star Wars Part the Fifth was released in 2014 and was a New York Times bestseller. A third book, William Shakespeare's The Jedi Doth Return, was released in 2014.
Trance Remixes is a 2002 album by 2 Unlimited, a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth.
Power Tracks is a 1993 album by 2 Unlimited, a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth.
United We Doth is the second and final album from art collective PFFR. It was released on July 29, 2003 by Birdman Records. The album cover art was designed by Scott Hug The last track is unlisted.
Greatest Hits Remixes is a 2001 album by 2 Unlimited, a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth.
Best Hits is a greatest hits compilation from 2 Unlimited, a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth.
2 Unlimited is an electronic music project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde, and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth. In the early 1990s, Slijngaard was asked to write rap lyrics for a tune written by the two Belgian producers. Slijngaard also wrote a chorus to be sung by a female vocalist, for which he invited Anita Doth. The demo was presented to De Coster and Wilde, leading to Slijngaard joining 2 Unlimited, and "Get Ready for This" was produced as their first single.
The first song is a setting of Ariel's Song to Ferdinand from The Tempest. It refers to Ferdinand's father — Alonso, King of Naples — who is presumed drowned in a shipwreck and whose body undergoes a magical transformation in the ocean depths. The Tempest, Act 1 scene 2: > Full fathom five thy father lies, > Of his bones are coral made; > Those are pearls that were his eyes: > Nothing of him that doth fade, > But doth suffer a sea-change > Into something rich and strange. > Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell: > Ding-dong.
Other notable examples include Aaron's description of Tamora; "Upon her wit doth earthly honour wait,/And virtue stoops and trembles at her frown" (2.1.10–11). An ironic and sarcastic reference to honour occurs when Bassianus and Lavinia encounter Aaron and Tamora in the forest and Bassianus tells Tamora "your swarthy Cimmerian/Doth make your honour of his body's hue,/Spotted, detested, and abominable" (2.3.72–74). Later, after the Clown has delivered Titus' letter to Saturninus, Saturninus declares "Go, drag the villain hither by the hair./Nor age nor honour shall shape privilege" (4.4.55–56).
Sonnet 83 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet, which has three quatrains, followed by a final rhyming couplet. It follows the rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG and is composed in iambic pentameter, a metre of five feet per line, with two syllables in each foot accented weak/strong. Most of the lines are examples of regular iambic pentameter, including the 7th line: × / × / × / × / × / How far a modern quill doth come too short, / × × / × / × / × / Speaking of worth, what worth in you doth grow. (83.7-8) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position.
In Twelfth Night, Maria's letter in Olivia's handwriting designed to gull Malvolio reads: "I may command where I adore; but silence, like a Lucrece knife, With bloodless stroke my heart doth gore: M, O, A, I, doth sway my life." As Malvolio interprets the "fustian riddle", Olivia's inability or unwillingness to speak of her love for him is killing her, like the literal knife of Lucretia's suicide. Malvolio also notes that Olivia uses an image of Lucrece as a personal seal, and it is this that convinces him the letter is from Olivia.
The fact that the early versions are almost identical to current versions implies that it has been valued for the simplicity of the words. It is also very compact in geographical spread. Almost all collected version are from the south of England, and none were collected outside England. The verse: :My father he doth lie at the bottom of the sea :No stone at his head, ah, but what careth he? :While that clear crystal fountain over England doth roll :Give me the punch ladle, I’ll fathom the bowl is slightly mysterious.
He also included 'doth' between 'down' and 'rayne' based on his probable interpretation that the wind did blow the rain away. Some modernization of spellings was done by other editors to make the poem accessible for modern reading.
Q.26: How doth Christ execute the office of a king? :Christ executeth the office of a king, in subduing us to himself, in ruling and defending us, and in restraining and conquering all his and our enemies.
On 20 April 2016, 2 Unlimited announced that Anita Doth will be leaving the band to embark on a solo career. On 13 August, Kim Vergouwen, being Anita's replacement, was revealed to the public via Ray Slijngaard's Facebook page.
Both the album title and artwork suggest the possibly of continued output, with its cover stating "in which 13 years later the dead doth rise again" and the more blatant "we're baaaaaaack [sic]" exclaimed in the albums' liner notes.
Langdon, A. G. (1896) Old Cornish Crosses. Truro: Joseph Pollard; p. 421 Over the porch is a typical sundial of a wide class of Cornish church dials from 1720. The inscription reads ″Bright Sol and Luna Time and Tide doth hold.
The hymn was translated to English as "The mouth of fools doth God confess" and appeared in R. Massie's M. Luther's Spiritual Songs in 1854. It was copied to other hymnals. Other, less common translations were published in the 19th century.
According to Winwood, the baby was a "strong and a goodly prince, and doth promise long life".Buisseret, 109. The birth of a dauphin, as the first son of a French king was known, inspired rejoicing and bonfires throughout France.Moote, 20.
First edition (UK) How Doth The Little Crocodile? was the first of two murder mystery novels written by twin authors Anthony and Peter Shaffer. It featured their eccentric detective Mr Verity who also appeared in their other novel Withered Murder.
The cantata begins with a recitative for both solo voices, "Die Zeit, die Tag und Jahre macht" (Time, which day and year doth make). It reflects that Anhalt, the prince's domain, was given many hours of blessing in the past.
For Money is > but the Fat of the Body-Politick, whereof too much doth often hinder its > agility, as too little makes it sick... so doth Money in the State quicken > its Action, feeds from abroad in the time of Dearth at home.'Hull 1899: > p.113 What is striking about these passages is his intellectual rigour, which put him far ahead of the mercantilist writers of earlier in the century. The use of biological analogies to illustrate his point, a trend continued by the physiocrats in France early in the 18th century, was also unusual.
In English, rule of thumb refers to an approximate method for doing something, based on practical experience rather than theory. The exact origin of the phrase is uncertain. Its earliest (1685) appearance in print comes from a posthumously published collection of sermons by Scottish preacher James Durham: "Many profest Christians are like to foolish builders, who build by guess, and by rule of thumb (as we use to speak), and not by Square and Rule". The phrase is also found in Sir William Hope's The Compleat Fencing Master, 1692: "What he doth, he doth by rule of Thumb, and not by Art".
He painted the ceilings of the Royal Hospital Greenwich and the Dome of Saint Paul's Cathedral. Thomas Carew's poem "Upon the Royal Ship called the 'Sovereign of the Seas', built by Peter Pett, Master Builder; His Father, Captain Phineas Pett, Supervisor: 1637" is a paean to the vessel, calling it the eighth wonder of the world: ...Monarchal Ship, whose Fabrick doth outpride The Pharos, Colosse, Memphique Pyramide... We yt have heard of Seaven, now see ye Eight Wonder at home; of Naual art the height... Neptune is proud o'th burden, and doth wonder To hear a Fourefold Fire out-rore Iouv's Thunder....
Students are taught that there must be the "fervet opus", that is figuratively, we must not only strike the iron while it is hot, but strike it till it is made hot. Following on this, a proverb states that "He who has heart has everything" ("che non arde non incende", who doth not burn doth not inflame). It is astonishing how much may be accomplished in self-culture by the energetic and the persevering, who are careful to avail themselves of opportunities, and use up the fragments of spare time which the idle permit to run to waste.
The ox, the ass, and the infant Jesus in one of the earliest depictions of the nativity, (Ancient Roman Christian sarcophagus, 4th century) Christmas crib parish Church St. James in Ebing, Germany A donkey (or ass) and an ox typically appear in nativity scenes. Besides the necessity of animals for a manger, this is an allusion to the Book of Isaiah: "the ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib; but Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider" . The Gospels do not mention an ox and donkeyHobgood-Oster, Laura. Holy Dogs and Asses: Animals in the Christian Tradition.
Ian Doescher (born 1977)Huffington Post Mini Bio is an American fiction writer, best known as the author of the plays in the William Shakespeare's Star Wars trilogy series, Verily, a New Hope (2013), The Empire Striketh Back (2014), and The Jedi Doth Return (2014), parodic retellings of George Lucas's Star Wars film trilogy (1977–1983) in blank verse and 16th-century style of William Shakespeare. At Powell's Bookstore in Portland, Oregon. Doescher (center) does a reading of The Jedi Doth Return with former classmate Anne Huebsch (left) and audience member Micah Read from Lincoln High School (right). July, 2014.
The Queen in "Hamlet" by Edwin Austin Abbey "The lady doth protest too much, methinks" is a line from the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare. It is spoken by Queen Gertrude in response to the insincere overacting of a character in the play within a play created by Prince Hamlet to prove his uncle's guilt in the murder of his father, the King of Denmark. The phrase is used in everyday speech to indicate doubt concerning someone's sincerity in their expressed disapproval of something. A common misquotation places methinks first, as in "methinks the lady doth protest too much".
The text of Torri's Magnificat is the Latin version of the Biblical canticle "My soul doth magnify the Lord" from the first chapter of the Gospel of Luke (10 verses), followed by a doxology (2 verses). The composition is in C major.
The glorious company of the Apostles praise Thee. The noble army of > Martyrs: praise Thee. The holy Church throughout all the world: doth > acknowledge Thee; The Father: of an infinite Majesty; Thine honourable, > true: and only Son. Also the Holy Ghost: the Comforter.
Indeed, the rule as given by Robert Recorde in his Ground of Artes (c. 1542) is: :::Gesse at this woorke as happe doth leade. :::By chaunce to truthe you may procede. :::And firste woorke by the question, :::Although no truthe therein be don.
Furthermore, in lines 3 and 4, Shakespeare continues use of the idea that his lover is a reflection of himself by saying "As from my soul which in thy breast doth lie".Witt, Robert W. Of Comfort and Despair: Shakespeare's Sonnet Sequence. Salzburg: Inst.
In his Induction to Every Man out of His Humour (1599) Jonson explains his character-formula thus: > Some one peculiar quality > Doth so possess a man, that it doth draw > All his affects, his spirits, and his powers, > In their confluctions, all to run one way. The comedy of humours owes something to earlier vernacular comedy but more to a desire to imitate the classical comedy of Plautus and Terence and to combat the vogue of romantic comedy, as developed by William Shakespeare. The satiric purpose of the comedy of humours and its realistic method lead to more serious character studies with Jonson’s 1610 play The Alchemist.
The term originally appears in William Shakespeare's The Tempest in a song sung by a supernatural spirit, Ariel, to Ferdinand, a prince of Naples, after Ferdinand's father's apparent death by drowning: > Full fathom five thy father lies, Of his bones are coral made, Those are > pearls that were his eyes, Nothing of him that doth fade, But doth suffer a > sea-change, into something rich and strange, Sea-nymphs hourly ring his > knell, Ding-dong. Hark! now I hear them, ding-dong, bell. The term sea change is therefore often used to mean a metamorphosis or alteration.The Absent Shakespeare – Mark Jay Mirsky. p. 132.
But the use of flags for signalling messages long remained primitive, as indicated by the 1530 instruction that when the Admiral > doth doth shote of a pece of Ordnance, and set up his Banner of Council on > Starrborde bottocke of his Shippe, everie shipps capten shall with spede go > aborde the Admyrall to know his will., p.77, quoting from W. G. Perrin, > "British flags" (Cambridge, 1922). Several wars with the Dutch in the 17th century prompted the English to issue instructions for the conduct of particular fleets, such as (in 1673) the Duke of York's "Instructions for the better Ordering of His Majesties Fleet in Sayling".
On 14 March 1660 the "jurisdiction power over that land that Uncas and Wawequa have made over to Major Mason is by him surrendered to this Colony. Nevertheless for the laying out of those lands to farms or plantations the Court doth leave it in the hands of Major Mason. It is also ordered and provided with the consent of Major Mason, that Uncus & Wawequa and their Indians and successors shall be supplied with sufficient planting ground at all times as the Court sees cause out of that land. And the Major doth reserve for himself a competence of land sufficient to make a farm".
Our two souls therefore, which are one, Though I must go, endure not yet A breach, but an expansion, Like gold to airy thinness beat. If they be two, they are two so As stiff twin compasses are two; Thy soul, the fixed foot, makes no show To move, but doth, if the other do. And though it in the center sit, Yet when the other far doth roam, It leans and hearkens after it, And grows erect, as that comes home. Such wilt thou be to me, who must, Like th' other foot, obliquely run; Thy firmness makes my circle just, And makes me end where I begun.
A pangrammatic lipogram or lipogrammatic pangram uses every letter of the alphabet except one. An example omitting the letter E is:Susan Elkin,Lipograms: The Presence of Absence, p. 15. :A jovial swain should not complain :Of any buxom fair :Who mocks his pain and thinks it gain :To quiz his awkward air. A longer example is "Fate of Nassan", an anonymous poem dating from pre-1870, where each stanza is a lipogrammatic pangram using every letter of the alphabet except E. > Bold Nassan quits his caravan, A hazy mountain grot to scan; Climbs jaggy > rocks to find his way, Doth tax his sight, but far doth stray.
Lloyd Doth “L.D.” Ottinger is a former NASCAR Busch Series driver. He raced occasionally in the Winston Cup Series during his career. Driving the Black Diamond Coal #2 Chevy, he was a Champion in the NASCAR Late Model Sportsman series, predecessor of the Busch Grand National Series.
The translations in this edition were heavily reworked, with words such as hath and doth removed entirely. The prose, however, remained similar to the original edition, which Hugh Kenner in Poetry attributes to Pound understanding that significant changes to the content "would require a wholly new book".
A tin of Lyle's Golden Syrup The story of Samson and the bees is celebrated on tins of Tate & Lyle golden syrup. William Shakespeare knew of bugonia as he says in Henry IV: "Tis seldom when the bee doth leave her comb, in the dead carrion".
Now, O now, I needs must part, Parting though I absent mourn. Absence can no joy impart: Joy once fled cannot return. While I live I needs must love, Love lives not when Hope is gone. Now at last Despair doth prove, Love divided loveth none.
Sad despair doth drive me hence, This despair unkindness sends. If that parting be offence, It is she which then offends. Dear, when I am from thee gone, Gone are all my joys at once. I loved thee and thee alone, In whose love I joyed once.
Following this show, Snoop Dogg made a guest appearance on PFFR's 'United We Doth' LP as well as a second-season episode of Xavier: Renegade Angel. In 2015 PFFR produced and directed the music video for Animal Collective's song FloriDada, the first single off of their album Painting With.
What Doth Life is a record label founded in 2010 and based in Windsor, Vermont. Notable artists include The Pilgrims, Carton, Giant Travel Avant Garde, Luke Chrisinger, and Derek and the Demons. The label is run by the musicians it represents and is described as a "musician's co-op".
I to the hills will lift mine eyes, from whence doth come mine aid. My safety cometh from the Lord, who heav'n and earth hath made. Thy foot he'll not let slide, nor will he slumber that thee keeps. Behold, he that keeps Israel, he slumbers not, nor sleeps.
Jean-Paul DeCoster is thought to have denied permission for them to use the name 2 Unlimited, as he still owns the rights to the brand. On 11 July 2012, it was announced that Slijngaard and Doth would be working again with De Coster under the name 2 Unlimited.
Best Unlimited is a greatest hits compilation from 2 Unlimited, a Eurodance project founded in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth. The record was released on September 30, 1998 via Mercury Records.
The Dutch poet Joost van den Vondel published an emblematic collection based on his prints, Vorstelijke Warande der Dieren (Princely pleasure-ground of beasts, Amsterdam 1617), in which the poem Den aap en de katte appears. In England the scene was reused as one of twelve circular engravings, intended for trenchers, made in 1630-36. The text around the edge of the picture reads: "The Monkey seing nuts in fire Doth force the Cat to plucke them neir; Which showeth the Envious doth not care, Whose House do burne so they have share". In Germany it was incorporated into a view of the Schloss Johannisberg wine estate in 's Thesaurus Philopoliticus (later known as the Sciographia Cosmica) of 1623.
The dreadful pestilence doth now begin To shed its venom in thy chiefest seat— Denouncing judgment for thy heinous sin Except repentance, Mercy do entreat. And lest this punishment should seem too small, Behold, another stroke doth wound they head: Renownéd James, that was admired of all For learnéd skill, thy king of peace, is dead. —Whose gentle nature, though it did decline The sad aspect of war’s most direful look. In future ages shall his valor shine For one brave combat which he undertook: His pen, the weapon was; the Truth, the cause (His proud foe, Rome, the murderer of kings); Whose worthy work, deserving high applause, Hath left the Romanists a deadly sting.
See there that boy, > that murthering boy I say, Who like a thief, hid in dark bush doth lie, Till > bloody bullet get him wrongful prey. So tyrant he no fitter place could spy, > Nor so fair level in so secret stay, As that sweet black which veils the > heav'nly eye: There himself with his shot he close doth lay. Poor passenger, > pass now thereby I did, And stayed pleas'd with the prospect of the place, > While that black hue from me the bad guest hid: But straight I saw motions > of lightning grace, And then descried the glist'ring of his dart: But ere I > could fly hence, it pierc'd my heart.
For instance, Leland stated in the mid 1500s that "The welthe of the towne of Worcestar standithe most by draping, and noe towne of England, at this present tyme, maketh so many cloathes yearly as this towne doth."Quoted in The glove-making trade has its roots in this period.
The 4th line may be scanned with a rightward movement of the first ictus (the resulting four-position figure, `× × / /`, is sometimes referred to as a minor ionic): × × / / × / × / × / And my sick Muse doth give another place. (79.4) The meter calls for a 2-syllable pronunciation of "worthier" in the 6th line.
Get Ready! is the debut studio album by 2 Unlimited, a Dutch Eurodance group formed in 1991 by Belgian producers Jean-Paul DeCoster and Phil Wilde and fronted by Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth. The album includes 2 Unlimited's breakthrough worldwide hit single "Get Ready for This".
"Here reason keeps a great clamour, and saith, doth God make man to damn him?"Tomkinson Truth's Triumph p. 229 Tomkinson replies with the old story of the pots discussing their potter. Thus, repentance is a sign of God's grace working, not what calls forth the grace in the first place.
In 1965, David Miller composed the following lyrics, which are used for submariners and divers: :Lord God, our power evermore, :Whose arm doth reach the ocean floor, :Dive with our men beneath the sea; :Traverse the depths protectively. :O hear us when we pray, and keep :Them safe from peril in the deep.
God declares that "man still must err, while he doth strive". It is shown that the outcome of the bet is certain, for "a good man, in his darkest impulses, remains aware of the right path", and Mephistopheles is permitted to lead Faust astray only so that he may learn from his misdeeds.
And if I may say to your Lordship my conscience: I > think some of them be sorry for it, God forgive me. … Mine own opinion is > much quieted … the circumstances and as many things as I can learn doth > persuade me that only misfortune hath done it, and nothing else.Skidmore > 2010 p.
This piece was parodied as "Ancient Music" by the American poet Ezra Pound (Lustra, 1916): > Winter is icumen in, Lhude sing Goddamm, Raineth drop and staineth slop, And > how the wind doth ramm! Sing: Goddamm. Skiddeth bus and sloppeth us, An ague > hath my ham. Freezeth river, turneth liver, Damm you; Sing: Goddamm.
The book's title derives from Hebrews, Chapter 12 verse 1: "Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us".
With observations on style. London: Printed for R. Griffiths, 1761. The book was very successful—it was reprinted for over fifty years. Its humor may have contributed to its popularity; for example, Priestley illustrated the couplet with this rhyme: ::Beneath this stone my wife doth lie: ::She's now at rest, and so am I.Qtd.
Logan and Smith, p. 276. Shakespeare appears to have known of The True Tragedy, since he paraphrases it in Hamlet, III,ii,254, "the croaking raven doth bellow for revenge." Line 1892 in The True Tragedy reads "The screeking raven sits croking for revenge." Unlike Shakespeare, "The True Tragedy" has no act or scene division.
115 (10):36 David Browne, with Entertainment Weekly, gave the album a B- saying, "one wishes Mayer were a more convincing rebel, but at least he doth protest a little."Browne, David (March 14, 2003), "Strummer Time". Entertainment Weekly. (700):62 Commercially, Any Given Thursday entered the Billboard Albums Top 100 chart at number 34.
His Office is to teach the Virtues of the Stars, and to know the > Mansions of the Planets, and how to understand their Virtues. He also > transformeth Men, and he giveth Dignities, Prelacies, and Confirmation > thereof; also Favour with Friends and with Foes. He doth govern 30 Legions > of Spirits; and his Seal is this, etc.
The Lord thee keeps, the Lord thy shade on thy right hand doth stay: The moon by night thee shall not smite, nor yet the sun by day. The Lord shall keep thy soul; he shall preserve thee from all ill. Henceforth thy going out and in God keep for ever will. I to the Hills, tune or Tune.
In 2015, Carrington was honoured through a Google Doodle commemorating her 98th birthday. The Doodle was based on her painting, How Doth the Little Crocodile, drawn in surrealist style. The painting was inspired by a poem in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and this painting was eventually turned into Cocodrilo located on Paseo de la Reforma.
Magnificence is one of the best examples of the morality play. It deals with the same topic as his satires - the evils of ambition. The play's moral, namely "how suddenly worldly wealth doth decay," was a favourite with him. Thomas Warton in his History of English Poetry described another piece titled Nigramansir, printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1504.
In darkness let me dwell; the ground shall sorrow be, The roof despair, to bar all cheerful light from me; The walls of marble black, that moist'ned still shall weep; My music, hellish jarring sounds, to banish friendly sleep. Thus, wedded to my woes, and bedded in my tomb, O let me living die, till death doth come, till death doth come. Second stanza included in the Coprario 1606 setting: My dainties grief shall be, and tears my poisoned wine, My sighs the air through which my panting heart shall pine, My robes my mind shall suit exceeding blackest night, My study shall be tragic thoughts sad fancy to delight, Pale ghosts and frightful shades shall my acquaintance be: O thus, my hapless joy, I haste to thee.English Madrigal Verse, 1588–1632, ed.
Matthews 1971 qtd. pp. 163–164 Josiah Conder, in a September 1820 Eclectic Review, argues that: > Mr Keats, seemingly, can think or write of scarcely any thing else than the > 'happy pieties' of Paganism. A Grecian Urn throws him into an ecstasy: its > 'silent form,' he says, 'doth tease us out of thought as doth Eternity,'—a > very happy description of the bewildering effect which such subjects have at > least had upon his own mind; and his fancy having thus got the better of his > reason, we are the less surprised at the oracle which the Urn is made to > utter: > >> 'Beauty is truth, truth beauty,'—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. > > That is, all that Mr Keats knows or cares to know.
A "Mr S" from Hull invoked Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in a laudatory verse: For she doth teach the torches to burn bright And entertains me late into the night With harmony, and melody and mirth On Radio 2 - the greatest show on earth. Line retired from "the greatest show on earth" in February 1996 and Jim Moir replaced her.
Horde as an entity also received death threats for being a Christian band playing black metal. Upon original release in 1994, 4,000 copies of the album were printed. In 1999 Rowe Productions purchased all remaining copies and distributed them worldwide. The album has since been re-released on this label with an additional track entitled, "My Heart Doth Beseech Thee (O Master)".
George I by Georg Wilhelm Lafontaine St James's Palace. The large window on the right is a window of the Chapel Royal The work calls for six solo vocalists, chorus and instrumental ensemble including trumpet. :(Soloists, Chorus and Orchestra) :We praise thee, O Lord, :We acknowledge thee to be the Lord. :All the earth doth worship thee, :The Father everlasting.
Decretum Gratiani, C. 4, q. 2 et 3, c. 3 The foundation of common law, the 16th Century Institutes of the Lawes of England described how a hermaphrodite could inherit "either as male or female, according to that kind of sexe which doth prevaile."E Coke, The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, Institutes 8.a.
"My Lord Southampton and Lord Rutland," wrote Rowland Whyte to Sir Robert Sydney in 1599, "come not to the court: the one doth but very seldom. They pass away the time in London merely in going to plays every day".; . Southampton was deeply involved in the Essex's Rebellion of 1601, and in February of that year he was sentenced to death.
"Twilight Zone" is a song recorded by the Dutch Eurodance band 2 Unlimited.It was the second single released in January 1992. The UK release of the single was the first 2 Unlimited single to include the vocals of Anita Doth as they had not been featured on their debut hit "Get Ready for This". However, Ray Slijngaard's raps were once again removed.
Abbott (1937–47), iii, pp. 53–5. In a much-analysed passage, Cromwell is supposed to have declared: "God doth manifest it to be the day of the Power of Jesus Christ".Abbott (1937–47), iii, p.63 This has sometimes been adduced as evidence that Cromwell shared Harrison's Fifth Monarchist beliefs, welcoming the assembly as the start of Christ's kingdom on earth.
The book is about twelve forest creatures whose mates disappear after being crystallized by a dark dust that falls every evening. The forest creatures combine forces with Zac (the handsome woodcarver), Ana (his beautiful half-elf, half-human wife), and their timid, chubby, winged "doth" Pook (inspired by the author's dog Misty) to save the creatures and restore the dying forest.
Upon original release in 1994, 4,000 copies of the album were printed. In 1999, Rowe Productions purchased all remaining copies and distributed them worldwide. The album has since been re-released on this label with an additional track entitled, "My Heart Doth Beseech Thee (O Master)". However, in 2004 the Australian label Soundmass re-issued Hellig Usvart as a 10-year anniversary edition.
1904 page 94. Tudor readers of poetry would surely recognise in the above lines a parody of lines from Shakespeare's extremely popular poem Venus and Adonis, published the previous year: :An oven that is stopp’d, or river stayed :Burneth more hotly, swelleth with more rage. :So of concealed sorrow may be said :Free vent of words love’s fire doth assuage.Shakespeare, William.
What doth all my glory profit but that I have so much the more torment in my death?" :— Philip III of Spain (31 March 1621) ;"All right then, I'll say it. Dante makes me sick." :— Lope de Vega, Spanish playwright (27 August 1635) ;"I, feeble and of small virtue, have offended against Heaven; the rebels have seized my capital because my ministers deceived me.
Frontispiece: "The Cat doth play,/ And after slay." – Childs Guide The Essay is modelled on Jonathan Swift's satire Instructions to Servants (1746), and even mentions Swift directly,Collier (2006), p. 6. but Collier reverses the roles in Swift's satire and instead writes from a servant's perspective in the first book. All of her suggestions are to aid in the process of "teasing and mortifying".
The lines below show the varied stress patterns, as well as an interior rhyme (grey/decay) picked up by the end-rhyme with "away". The initial line quoted here, "bright", rhymes with "night" a full seven lines earlier. ::But when the noon waxed bright ::Her hair grew thin and grey; ::She dwindled, as the fair full moon doth turn ::To swift decay, and burn ::Her fire away.
The church is noted as having a jack o' the clock dated 1682. In 1840 this was standing on a ladder in the tower arch and it chimed the hours. Beneath it was this inscription : — " As the hours pass away, So doth the life of man decay."The Reliquary and Illustrated Archaeologist,: A Quarterly Journal and Review... Llewellyn Frederick William Jewitt, John Charles Cox, John Romilly Allen.
"Scattered" also has positive connotations, however, especially in relation to farming. A farmer will "scatter" seeds to grow or "scatter" feed for beasts. Although this is not the implied meaning here, these connotations are significant in view of the frequency with which animal-husbandry and agricultural language appear throughout the Book of Psalms. "But on God's law his heart's delight doth binde" (Sidney Psalter, 2009, p. 11).
By April 1651 Muggleton had begun to feel that he lacked the power to reason his way out of his perplexities about resurrection and hellfire. He concluded that he must leave it all to God: "even as the potter doth what he will with the dead clay." He began to experience revelations concerning the meaning of scripture. The following January his cousin John Reeve underwent similar experiences.
Shall I say 'tis so? > O, that I knew thy heart, and knew the beast, > That I might rail at him to ease my mind! > Sorrow conceal'd, like an oven stopped, > Doth burn the heart to cinders where it is. > Fair Philomela, why she but lost her tongue, > And in a tedious sampler sewed her mind; > But, lovely niece, that mean is cut from thee.
Growing, growing, Cruel death soon put an end to his growing. And now my love is dead and in his grave doth lie, The green grass grows o'er him so very, very high. I'll sit and I'll mourn his fate until the day I die, And I'll watch o'er his child while he's growing. Growing, growing, And I'll watch o'er his child while he's growing.
Therefore, have remorse in your conscience; fear Him that may > kill both body and soul. > Beware of innocent blood-shedding; take heed of justice ignorantly > administered; work discreetly as the Scripture doth command; look to it that > ye make not the Truth to be forsaken. > We beseech God to save our King, King Henry the Eighth, that he be not led > into temptation. So be it.
"One M'Gawran who terms himself Primate, doth much mischief riding on his chief horse, with his staff and shirt of mail. Tirone's own foster brothers at the burning of Ballymote".Calendar of State Papers, Ireland, 6 June 1593, pp.103 &105 A dispute arose amongst the O'Rourkes and Maguires about the division of the spoils from Ballymote and Archbishop Magauran tried to settle it.
137 Tomkinson admits witches have an excellent understanding of nature and that is how they dupe those who do not. It is not wrong to say the victim is bewitched. "The imagination of the mind doth do and conceive strong things." Thus, we may swoon when we see another's blood, or vomit when we see something foul, or experience vertigo at a great height.
Bhimji, therefore, asked the company to secure a type-founder. In a letter from Surat to the East India Company, dated 23 January 1676: :"The Printing design doth not yet meet with the success as expected by Bimgee Parrack.... Wee have seen some papers printed in the Banian Character by the persons employed by Bimgee which looks very well and legible and shews the work is feasible; but the charge and tediousness of these people for want of better experience doth much discourage, if you Honours would please to send out a founder of [sic] Caster of letters at Bimgees charge he would esteem it a great favor and honor…"Priolkar, The Printing Press in India, pp. 31-32. Against the Englishman’s apparent lack of training, Gokhale contests that the "Englishman refused to impart his skill to Indians." Gokhale, however, does not cite any sources to substantiate his opinion.
Having both continued to perform their old hits separately in nightclubs and university student unions around the world, the original performers Slijngaard and Doth reunited on 11 April 2009, to perform together for the first time in 13 years at the "I Love the 90s" concert in Hasselt, Belgium.. Ilovethe90s.be. According to a radio interview with Slijngaard, Jean-Paul De Coster did not give permission for the duo to perform under the name 2 Unlimited; however, Phil Wilde attended the gig and provided help with preparing backing tracks. On 30 April 2009, Slijngaard and Doth performed five songs at the Radio 538 Queen's Day concert at Museumplein in Amsterdam. On 8 June, they were awarded "Most Popular Act of the 1990s", based on the number of weeks in the Dutch Top 40; on 25 September, they performed as a support act for Milk Inc.
In the Hebrew Bible, Psalm 54:1-2 comprise the designation : To the chief Musician on Neginoth, Maschil, A Psalm of David, : when the Ziphims came and said to Saul, Doth not David hide himself with us? (KJV) From then on Psalm 54:1–7 in English versions correspond to verses 3–9 in the Hebrew text.Keil, Carl Friedrich; Delitzsch, Franz. ’'Commentary on the Old Testament’’ (1857-1878).
The Chorus appears again: "Grapple your minds to sternage of this navy/And leave your England, as dead midnight still". The French king, says the Chorus, "doth offer him / Catharine his daughter, and with her, to dowry, / Some petty and unprofitable dukedoms." Henry is not satisfied. At the siege of Harfleur, the English are beaten back at first, but Henry urges them on with one of Shakespeare's best-known speeches.
As is customary for papal encyclicals, the Latin title of Spe salvi comes from its incipit, which quotes St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans: "For we are saved by hope. But hope that is seen is not hope. For what a man seeth, why doth he hope for?" In the introduction of the encyclical, Benedict sets the tone of his text by asking about the relationship between hope and redemption.
One verse in particular is used to point specifically to the coming apostate church, 2 Thessalonians 2:7. In the King James Version (KJV) this reads: "For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he be taken out of the way." Martin Luther believed and taught that the church had strayed and fallen away from the true teachings of the scripture.
91 Panthea realises that Asia is changed, and described how her sister radiates with beauty. A song fills the air singing the "Life of Life", a song about the power of love. Asia tells of her current state and describes, "Realms where the air we breathe is love,/ Which in the winds on the waves doth move,/ Harmonizing this earth with what we feel above."Shelley 1820 p.
In 1625 Elizabeth wrote letters to John, Earl of Mar and Marie, Countess of Mar about one of their sons, perhaps Henry or Alexander, who had asked her if he could marry Croft, after she noticed their relationship. Elizabeth recommended Croft as "an honest discreet woman and doth carie herself very well".Mary Anne Everett Green, Elizabeth Electress Palatine and Queen of Bohemia (London, 1909), p. 423: HMC Mar & Kellie, vol.
He wrote, "It doth not a little grieve my spirit to heare what sadd things are reported dayly of your tyranny and persecutions in New-England as that you fyne, whip and imprison men for their consciences." He continued, "these rigid wayes have layed you very lowe in the hearts of the saynts." Roger Williams also wrote a treatise on these persecutions which was published after Cotton's death.
Booker, p. 67. However, conflict again built up, this time over kneeling for communion, another of the practices defended by Morton. On the basis of , "Let all things be done decently and in order," Morton argued that it was :By vertue of which permission, the Apostle doth grant a generall licence and authoritie to all churches, to ordaine any ceremonies that may bee fit for the better serving of God.
Hits Unlimited is the fourth album from 2 Unlimited and the last to feature Ray Slijngaard and Anita Doth. It was a greatest hits package featuring 16 songs: 13 previous singles and 3 new ones. The album was certified gold in the Netherlands.NVPI.nl Dutch certification database Accessed November 4, 2006 Ray Slijngaard's raps on the verses were not cut on any of the songs on the UK release of this album.
I can truly say that I bestowed a more than ordinary Pains > in her Education ... I do not think my Child is entirely free from Faults. I > know nothing human that is so; but surely she doth not deserve the Rancour > with which she hath been treated by the Public.Fielding 1915 p. 186 Fielding's efforts only attracted further criticism, eventually resulting in his promise "to write no more novels".
A proxy marriage took place in Florence in October 1600, and then Maria—to be known in France as Marie—sailed in great pomp for Marseille, where she disembarked on 3 November. Henry, on campaign in Savoy, rode to meet her at Lyon, where he found her at supper. He visited her afterwards in her chamber; according to Ralph Winwood, secretary to English ambassador Sir Henry Neville: > She met him at the door, and offered to kneel down, but he took her in his > arms, where he held her embraced a long time ... He doth profess to the > World the great Contentment he finds in her, how that for her Beauty, her > sweet and pleasing carriage, her gracious behaviour, she doth surpass the > relation which hath been made of her, and the Expectation which he thereby > conceived.Quoted in Buisseret, 87. The couple underwent a second marriage ceremony in Lyon; and Marie finally reached Paris on 7 February, already pregnant.Buisseret, 87.
In 1994, she performed on the mobile carillon in Tønsberg, Norway for the 1994 Winter Olympics torch relay. Laage performed inaugural recitals for two carillons: at the Church of the Holy Ghost, Copenhagen in 1993 and at Frederiksborg Castle in Hillerød in 2005. She consulted on the design of both instruments. As a composer, Laage is noted for her hymn setting Free variations on "Built on a rock the Church doth stand" (2000).
Rush advocated Christianity in public life and in education and sometimes compared himself to the prophet Jeremiah.Hawke, p.5, citing Jeremiah's lament, "Woe is me, my mother, that thou has borne me, a man of strife, and a man of contention to the whole earth. I have neither lent on usury, nor have men lent to me on usury, yet every one of them doth curse me," in Letter to John Adams, December 26, 1811.
An advocate of English linguistic purism, he remarked "our own tung shold be written cleane and pure, vnmixt and vnmangeled with borowing of other tunges... For then doth our tung naturallie and praisablie vtter her meaning"; and he complimented Hoby on the 'roundness' of his 'saienges and welspeakinges'.See S.A.N. Cole, 'The rise of prescriptivism in English', Umm Al-Qura University Journal of Educational, Social Sciences, and Humanities, Vol. XV no. 2 – Jumad I, 1424H.
Anita Doth in the music video. "Jump for Joy" scored chart success in many European countries, peaking within the Top 10 on the singles charts in the Netherlands and Spain. Additionally, it reached the Top 20 in Belgium, as well as on the Eurochart Hot 100, where this was the last 2 Unlimited song to peak at number 13. It also managed to climb into the Top 40 in Sweden and Germany.
285 (20 February). The inscription on his tomb there was as follows: > "Here Thomas Tusser, clad in earth, doth lie, > That sometime made the pointes of Husbandrie; > By him then learne thou maiest; here learne we must, > When all is done, we sleepe, and turne to dust: > And yet, through Christ, to Heaven we hope to goe; > Who reades his bookes, shall find his faith was so." Stow's editorThoms 1876, p. 99, n.
How Doth The Little Crocodile? was first published in London by Evans in 1952 in the US by MacMillan in 1957 as part of their "Cock Robin Mystery" books. The first edition by Evans was published under the pseudonym Peter Anthony but this was changed to Anthony & Peter Shaffer by Macmillan. Another change to note is the detective's name goes from Mr Verity in the original to Mr Fathom in the US edition.
His wife Agnes Fleming, became an attendant of Mary in England. She came to Bolton Castle in August 1568, with two waiting women and eight male servants. She was travelling to Tutbury Castle in January 1569 when she fell ill at Rotherham, and Francis Knollys wrote that Mary "doth esteem (her) most dearly". At Tutbury, the Earl of Shrewsbury wrote that she, Mary Seton, and the queen, worked embroidery with his wife, Bess of Hardwick.
Xiehouyu () is a kind of Chinese proverb consisting of two elements: the former segment presents a novel scenario while the latter provides the rationale thereof. One would often only state the first part, expecting the listener to know the second. Compare English "an apple a day (keeps the doctor away)" or "speak of the devil (and he doth/shall appear)". Xiēhòuyǔ is translated as "enigmatic folk simile; truncated witticism; pun" (Wenlin 2016).
The Pilgrims are a rock band from Windsor, Vermont. Seven Days contributor Dan Bolles compared their style to alt-punk and indie rock, while John Powell, writing for Angelica Music, has likened them to rock and roll bands from the 1960s and 1970s. They are part of the Windsor, VT music collective What Doth Life, which has released albums by The Pilgrims, Giant Travel Avant Garde, Derek and The Demons, Carton, and Luke Chrisinger.
Early LST operations required overcoming the 18th-century language of the Articles for the Government of the United States Navy: "He who doth suffer his ships to founder on rocks and shoals shall be punished..." There were some tense moments of concept testing at Quonset, Rhode Island, in early 1943 when designer Niedermair encouraged the commanding officer of the first U.S. LST to drive his ship onto the beach at full speed of .
It was accepted from one, but not from the other. Said the latter: 'Be sure I will slay thee.' 'Surely' said the former, '(God) doth accept of the sacrifice of those who are righteous.' is virtually the same as the Hebrew Bible narrative, saying that both the brothers were asked to offer up individual sacrifices to God. God accepted Abel's sacrifice because of Abel's righteousness and Cain, out of jealousy, slew Abel.
Only on some well-drained soils were the fields left flat. In damper soil towards the base of the ridge, pulses (peas or beans) or dredge (a mixture of oats and barley) might be sown where wheat would have become waterlogged, as Thomas Tusser suggested in the 16th century: For wheat till land Where water doth stand. Sow pease or dredge below in that redge. The dip often marked the boundary between plots.
She agrees, and the group makes their way to the palace's inner sanctum, where Ryu personally confronts Fou-Lu and questions his motivation to destroy humanity after they have done so much for him in the past, recalling and comparing their memories.Fou-Lu: They, the mortals are ignorant and pride animals. They doth lie to one another, injure themselves and their fellows, and they kill each other all around for sport. Their folly is immeasurable.
In the Canterbury Tales (written some time after 1380) he uses the following line: "rolleth under foot as doth a ball". Similarly at the end of the 15th century comes a Latin account of a football game which was played at Cawston, Nottinghamshire, England. It is included in a manuscript collection of the miracles of King Henry VI of England. Although the precise date is uncertain it certainly comes from between 1481 and 1500.
Bart, played by Jonathan Groff in the Christian film, doth protest too much, and far too specifically. It sounds like the movie is already a whitewashed version of something in need of fresh paint. The episode bodes fairly well for season 30 because, even though The Simpsons has covered this subject a few times, they show they are not going to ease up on casual blasphemy. After thirty years, the series has become the authority.
M'Sweeny Ne Doe doth join Maguire with 400 galloglas. The North standeth altogether at the pleasure of the Earl and the pretended Primate Magawran". On 15 June 1593, the Lord Deputy and Council were in Dundalk where they examined the aforesaid Patrick M'Arte Moyle M'Mahon who informed them that- "Bishop M'Gawran's promise of forces out of Spain. The messages sent to him by Henry Oge O'Neill not to expose himself to danger.
These fathers pose the question, "Of what doth the Glory of Kings consist?" One Gregory answers with a speech (chapters 3-17) which ends with the statement that a copy of the Glory of God was made by Moses and kept in the Ark of the Covenant. After this, the archbishop DomitiusDomitius is identified at the beginning of this section as "Archbishop of Rom" (i.e. Constantinople), and at the end as of Antioch.
Abecedarian psalms and hymns exist, these are compositions like Psalm 119 in Hebrew, and the Akathist hymn in Greek, in which distinct stanzas or verses commence with successive letters of the alphabet.Definitions The New England Primer, a schoolbook first printed in 17th-century Boston, includes an abecedary of rhyming couplets in iambic dimeter, beginning with: :In Adam's fall, ::We sinned all. :Thy life to mend, ::This Book attend. :The Cat doth play, ::And after slay.
In 1994 he formed a solo project under the name Beheadoth and recorded the song "Mine Heart Doth Beseech Thee (O Master)" for a compilation album by Rowe Productions. Later, Sherlock changed the name Beheadoth to "Horde." He took advantage of his former band Mortification's relationship to Nuclear Blast Records, and talked to the label owner Markus Staiger about releasing Horde's album. Staiger became interested in the project and decided to release the album.
For as > the woman is of the man, even so is the man also by the woman; but all > things of God. Judge in yourselves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God > uncovered? Doth not even nature itself teach you, that, if a man have long > hair, it is a shame unto him? But if a woman have long hair, it is a glory > to her: for her hair is given her for a covering.
Reginald Scot listed Tom in his Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584) as one of the creatures used by servant maids to frighten children, along with witches, dwarfs, elves, fairies, giants, and other supernatural folk. Title page Coryat's Crudities Tom was mentioned by James Field in Coryat's Crudities (1611): "Tom Thumbe is dumbe, until the pudding creepe, in which he was intomb'd, then out doth peepe." The incident of the pudding was the most popular in connection with the character.
In early 2005 she launched her own record label, "Unicorn Records Romania", along with her father and brother. She has sung duets with Al Bano, Anita Doth (from 2 Unlimited) and Tony Hawks. She has performed as an opening act for Joan Baez (27 June 1997), Chick Corea (9 November 1998), Michael Bolton (7 July 2007), and Beyoncé (26 October 2007). In 2008, she performed a song together with "manele" singer Florin Salam at the Bucharest Symphonic Orchestra.
" Effectual calling is "the work of God's Spirit, whereby, convincing us of our sin and misery, enlightening our minds in the knowledge of Christ, and renewing our wills, he doth persuade and enable us to embrace Jesus Christ, freely offered to us in the gospel."Shorter Westminster Catechism, Question 31. In Reformed theology, "regeneration precedes faith." Samuel Storms writes that, "Calvinists insist that the sole cause of regeneration or being born again is the will of God.
McCune iv. "Against Idleness and Mischief" and "The Sluggard" (better known as "How doth the little busy bee" and "'Tis the voice of the sluggard") were both meant to teach children the importance of hard work, and were extremely well known in the nineteenth century. Walter de la Mare wrote that "a childhood without the busy bee and the sluggard would resemble a hymnal without ‘O God, our help in ages past’."De la Mare 318.
Charles Dickens's novels occasionally quote "Against Idleness and Mischief";McCune 1-14 for instance, in his 1850 novel David Copperfield, the school master Dr. Strong quotes lines 11-12: "Satan finds some mischief still, for idle hands to do."Dickens 220; ch. 16. In his 1865 fantasy Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll parodies both "Against Idleness and Mischief" as "How Doth the Little Crocodile"Gardner 23-24, note 5. and "The Sluggard" as "'Tis the voice of the Lobster".
Doth sang the choruses for the majority of their songs; however there were some B sides, and one successful single, "Nothing Like the Rain", where she sang close to all the lyrics. The band became an instant success in Europe and throughout the world. Their hits included songs such as "Maximum Overdrive", "No Limit", "Tribal Dance", "The Real Thing", "Twilight Zone" and "Workaholic". After sixteen music videos, forty-five songs, and four albums, the group split up in 1996.
The speaker has accepted that he must be alone, because he sees no way they can be together. In our two loves there is but one respect, / Though in our lives a separable spite, :When it comes to their compassion there is only one matter: love. But in reality, there is a "separable spite" that will keep them apart. Which, though it alter not love's sole effect, / Yet doth it steal sweet hours from love's delight.
The following is the first verse of Book 1: :Of angling and the art thereof I sing :What kind of tools it doth behove to have :And with what pleasing bayt a man may bring :The fish to bite within the watry wave. :A work of thanks to such as in a thing :Of harmless pleasure have regard to save :Their dearest soules from sinne and may intend :Of pretious time some part thereon to spend.
2 Unlimited is a Dutch dance act founded by Belgian producers Jean-Paul De Coster and Phil Wilde in 1991 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Dutch rapper Ray Slijngaard and Dutch vocalist Anita Doth fronted the act from 1991 to 1996. During the five years of 2 Unlimited's worldwide mainstream success, the act scored a total of 16 chart hits, including "Get Ready for This", "Twilight Zone", "No Limit", and "Tribal Dance". They have sold 18 million records worldwide.
The violence of their reaction, however, strikes me as an > example of "The lady doth protest too much." I think they may have > identified with Giorgio and Fosca all too readily and uncomfortably. The > idea of a love that's pure, that burns with D.H. Lawrence's gemlike flame, > emanating from a source so gnarled and selfish, is hard to accept. Perhaps > they were reacting to the realization that we are all Fosca, we are all > Giorgio, we are all Clara.
Sonnet 80 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet, which has three quatrains, followed by a final rhyming couplet. It follows the rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG and is composed in iambic pentameter, a metre of five feet per line, with two syllables in each foot accented weak/strong. Most of the lines are examples of regular iambic pentameter, including the 10th line: × / × / × / × / × / Whilst he upon your soundless deep doth ride; (80.10) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position. × = nonictus.
A more thematic word play used is those words denoting 'age', but that are not explicitly identifiable. > Doth homage to his new-appearing sight, Resembling strong youth in his > middle age, ... Attending on his golden pilgrimage; (7.3-6) By using words typical of expressing human features (e.g. youth), the reader begins to identify the sun as being representative of man. The sun does not assume an actual 'age', therefore we infer that the subject of the poem is man.
However, the first published version of the speech records this sentence as "God doth manifest it to be a day of the Power of Jesus Christ", considerably softening the impact, and implying that he merely thought it to be a spiritually joyful occasion.See discussion and particularly n.17 (Woolrych 1982, pp.148–149). Cromwell then asked a written 'instrument' to be read out, drawn up by the Council of Officers and investing power in the assembly.
See Green, in History of Worcester Volume ii. Worcester's suburbs extended beyond the limits of its walls Manufacture of cloth and allied trades began locally. Leland stated in the mid 1500s, for instance, that "the welthe of the towne of Worcestar standithe most by draping, and noe towne of England, at this present tyme, maketh so many cloathes yearly as this towne doth."Quoted in The glove- making trade also had its roots in this period.
Sonnet 95 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet. The English sonnet has three quatrains, followed by a final rhyming couplet. It follows the typical rhyme scheme of the form, ABAB CDCD EFEF GG, and is composed in iambic pentameter, a type of poetic metre based on five pairs of metrically weak/strong syllabic positions. The 11th line exemplifies a regular iambic pentameter: × / × / × / × / × / Where beauty's veil doth cover every blot (95.11) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position.
Machar has been called a tuut dhoali/Doth in English, which may be translated "adult boy", meaning uninitiated and literate. He has tried to transcend tribal divisions, and at one time attempted to ban initiation marks. However, in his struggle with John Garang he exploited ethnic rivalries between the Nuer and Dinka people. Machar married Emma McCune, a British aid worker. She died in a car accident in Nairobi in 1993 at the age of 29, while pregnant.
In 1997 he made a song with female singer Anita Doth who was part of the world-famous group 2 Unlimited. The song was called "That's when I stop loving you" In 2005, he was diagnosed prostate cancer that resulted in several complications. In the same year, he stated collaborating with Gerard Joling and Gordon in the opportunity formation De Toppers. Rene represented the Netherlands at the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 in Moscow as part of De Toppers.
Article XIV - Of Purgatory The Romish doctrine concerning purgatory, pardon, worshiping, and adoration, as well of images as of relics, and also invocation of saints, is a fond thing, vainly invented, and grounded upon no warrant of Scripture, but repugnant to the Word of God. Article XV - Of Speaking in the Congregation in Such a Tongue as the People Understand It is a thing plainly repugnant to the Word of God, and the custom of the primitive church, to have public prayer in the church, or to minister the Sacraments, in a tongue not understood by the people. Article XVI - Of the Sacraments Sacraments ordained of Christ are not only badges or tokens of Christian men's profession, but rather they are certain signs of grace, and God's good will toward us, by which he doth work invisibly in us, and doth not only quicken, but also strengthen and confirm, our faith in him. There are two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel; that is to say, Baptism and the Supper of the Lord.
In Poly- Olbion (first published in 1612) the poet Michael Drayton described the journey taken by the River Thames to the sea: > :As still his goodly traine yet every houre increast, :And from the Surrian > shores cleer Wey came down to meet :His Greatnes, whom the Tames so > gratiously doth greet :That with the Fearne-crown'd Flood he Minion-like > doth play: :Yet is not this the Brook, entiseth him to stay. :But as they > thus, in pompe, came sporting on the shole, :Gainst Hampton-Court he meets > the soft and gentle Mole. :Whose eyes so pierc't his breast, that seeming to > foreslowe :The way which he so long intended was to go, :With trifling up > and down, he wandreth here and there; :And that he in her sight, transparent > might appeare, :Applyes himselfe to Fords, and setteth his delight, :On that > which might make him gratious in her sight.Poly-Olbion, Song XVII lines > 20-32 :But Tames would hardly on: oft turning back to show, :For his much > loved Mole how loth he was to go.
The melody for Loys Bourgeois's Old 100th with Kethe's translation, from a 1628 publication William Kethe's translation is in long metre, and formed part of a collection of psalms translated into metrical form in English, the 1562 expanded 150-psalm edition of Thomas Sternhold's and John Hopkins's 1549 metrical psalter (Day's Psalter). First appearing in Fourscore and Seven Psalms of David (the so-called Genevan Psalter) the year before, it divides the verses in the same way as the Book of Common Prayer: # All people that on earth do dwell, sing to the Lord with cheerful voice: him serve with fear, his praise forth tell, come ye before him and rejoice! # The Lord, ye know, is God indeed, without our aid he did us make; we are his flock he doth us feed, and for his sheep he doth us take. # O enter then his gates with praise, approach with joy his courts unto; praise, laud, and bless his Name always, for it is seemly so to do.
English has (proportionally) far fewer rhyming words than Italian. Recognizing this, Shakespeare adapted the sonnet form to English by creating an alternate rhyme scheme: ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. The poet using this, the English sonnet or Shakespearean sonnet form, may use the fourteen lines as single unit of thought (as in "The Silken Tent" above), or treat the groups of four rhyming lines (the quatrains) as organizational units, as in Shakespeare's Sonnet 73: :That time of year thou mayst in me behold :When yellow leaves, or none, or few do hang :Upon those boughs which shake against the cold :Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds sang. :In me thou seest the twilight of such day :As after sunset fadeth in the west, :Which by and by black night doth steal away, :Death's second self, which seals up all in rest. :In me thou seest the glowing of such fire :That on the ashes of his youth doth lie, :As the deathbed whereon it must expire, :Consumed with that which it was nourished by.
Iago claims her emotional reaction is due to her being caught rather than concern for Cassio and gets her to admit that Cassio ate at her home earlier that evening. Both Iago and Emilia call her a prostitute, but Bianca replies "I am no strumpet; but of life as honest / as you that doth abuse me" (5.1.122-3). She is led off at the end of the scene to be questioned about the attack and is not mentioned again in the play.
Historically, English used to have a similar verbal paradigm. Some historic verb forms are used by Shakespeare as slightly archaic or more formal variants (I do, thou dost, she doth, typically used by nobility) of the modern forms. Some languages with verbal agreement can leave certain subjects implicit when the subject is fully determined by the verb form. In Spanish, for instance, subject pronouns do not need to be explicitly present, but in French, its close relative, they are obligatory.
In what has been called a coup d'état, the Cardinal of Lorraine and the Duke of Guise—whose niece, Mary, Queen of Scots, had married Francis II the year before—seized power the day after Henry II's death and quickly moved themselves into the Louvre Palace with the young couple.Knecht, Catherine de' Medici, 59. The English ambassador reported a few days later that "the house of Guise ruleth and doth all about the French king".Knecht, Catherine de' Medici, 60.
And it came to pass as he was sitting at meat in the house, behold many publicans and sinners came, and sat down with Jesus and his disciples. 11. And the Pharisees seeing it, said to his disciples: Why doth your master eat with publicans and sinners? 12. But Jesus hearing it, said: They that are in health need not a physician, but they that are ill. 13. Go then and learn what this meaneth, I will have mercy and not sacrifice.
Memorial to Sir Arthur Sullivan, Victoria Embankment Gardens London > The text of the Boer War Te Deum is as follows: We praise Thee, O God: we > acknowledge Thee to be the Lord. All the earth doth worship Thee: the Father > everlasting. To Thee all Angels cry aloud: the Heavens, and all the Powers > therein. To Thee Cherubin, and Seraphin: continually do cry, Holy, Holy, > Holy: Lord God of Sabaoth; Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty: of Thy > Glory.
After 2 Unlimited broke up in 1996, Doth became a presenter on Dutch music television station TMF (The Music Factory), hosting Welcome to the Pleasure Zone, a show featuring both music videos and live performances. She also worked as a DJ on Dutch radio station Radio 538.Dutch Rock & Pop Institute Later that year, she sang a duet with popular Dutch singer René Froger titled "That's When I'll Stop Loving You". The year 2000, saw the release of her solo album Reality.
This epitaph on Wigglesworth's grave in Bell Rock Cemetery has been attributed to Cotton Mather: :His pen did once Meat from the Eater take :And now he's gone beyond the Eater's reach :His body once so thin was next to none :From hence he's to unbodied spirits flown. :Once his rare skill did all diseases heal :And he doth nothing now uneasy feel. :He to his paradise is joyful come :And waits with joy to see his Day of Doom.
The note read: "Good Mr Jowler, we pray you to speak to the King (for he hears you every day and so he doth not us) that it will please His Majesty to go back to London, for else the country will be undone; all our provision is spent already and we are not able to entertain him longer."Quoted in Rook 1984, p. 79. During the civil war, the county was mainly parliamentarian. St Albans was an especially staunch parliamentary stronghold.
Thomas Hobbes took positions that strongly disagreed with orthodox Christian teachings. He argued repeatedly that there are no incorporeal substances, and that all things, even God, heaven, and hell are corporeal, matter in motion. He argued that "though Scripture acknowledge spirits, yet doth it nowhere say, that they are incorporeal, meaning thereby without dimensions and quantity". Voltaire, although himself a deist, was a forceful critic of religion and advocated for acceptance of all religions as well as separation of church and state.
He is buried in Harford Church, South Devon. His coffin inscription says: Here lyeth the corps of Thoms Willms esquire Twice reader he in court was Whose sacred minde to vertu did aspire Of Parlament he speaker hence did passé The comen he studied to preserue And thew relygion ever to maynetayne In place of justyce where as he dyd serue And nowe in heaven wth mightie love doth raigne Obiit primo die mensis Julii Ao Dni Moccccclxvi. Aetatis suæ anno quinquagesimo secundo.
The line's allusion to Gertrude's (lack of) fidelity to her husband has become a cliché of sexually fickle womanhood and a shorthand expression conveying doubt in a person's sincerity, even when the subject is male. As in the play, it is commonly used to imply that someone who denies something very strongly is hiding the truth. It is often shortened to "[X] protest[s] too much", or misquoted with methinks at the beginning, as in "methinks the lady doth protest too much".
The 17th-century English jurist and judge Edward Coke (Lord Coke), wrote in his Institutes of the Lawes of England on laws of succession stating, "Every heire is either a male, a female, or an hermaphrodite, that is both male and female. And an hermaphrodite (which is also called Androgynus) shall be heire, either as male or female, according to that kind of sexe which doth prevaile."E Coke, The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, Institutes 8.a. (1st Am. Ed. 1812).
The body of the Leviathan, especially his eyes, possesses great illuminating power. This was the opinion of Rabbi Eliezer, who, in the course of a voyage in company with Rabbi Joshua, explained to the latter, when frightened by the sudden appearance of a brilliant light, that it probably proceeded from the eyes of the Leviathan. He referred his companion to the words of Job 41:18: "By his neesings a light doth shine, and his eyes are like the eyelids of the morning".Bava Batra l.c.
252 With his "poet's eye",William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act 5, Scene 1: The poet's eye, in fine frenzy rolling, Doth glance from heaven to Earth, from Earth to heaven. Ashley has a "feminine sensitivity".Anne Goodwyn Jones (1981), Tomorrow is Another Day: The woman writer in the South 1859–1936, Baton Rouge: University of Louisiana Press, p. 354-355. Scarlett is angered by the "slur of effeminacy flung at Ashley" when her father tells her the Wilkes family was "born queer".
Nor, though they be dead, of the horrid career Of Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer, Peter Gurney, Peter Davy, Dan'l Whiddon, Harry Hawke, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all. When the wind whistles cold on the moor of the night. All along, down along, out along lea. Tom Pearce's old mare doth appear ghastly white, With Bill Brewer, Jan Stewer, Peter Gurney, Peter Davy, Dan'l Whiddon, Harry Hawke, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all, Old Uncle Tom Cobley and all.
The third bell was added around 1654 when the tower was completed following the earlier collapse of the spire. In 1731 the Bilbie family of Chew Stoke, cast two further bells the smallest bears these lines: > "I value not who doth me see > For Thomas Bilbie casted me; > Althow my sound it is but small > I can be heard amongst you all." In 1987 all the bells were lowered from the tower and recast by White's of Appleton and then electronically tuned by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry.
Sonnet 76 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet. The English sonnet has three quatrains, followed by a final rhyming couplet. It follows the rhyme scheme ABAB CDCD EFEF GG, and is composed in iambic pentameter, a type of metre based on five feet in each line, and each foot composed of a pair of syllables accented weak/strong. The 7th line is an example of a regular iambic pentameter: × / × / × / × / × / That every word doth almost tell my name, (76.7) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position.
I doubt of the forbearing hand by former experience, for vile natures will ascribe that patience to pusillanimity that the noble would to contempt. For my part I am ready to undergo what he doth, and none that have been most tied to him by benefits are or shall be more tied in affection. Let this suffice, and lose I pray you no time to perform those offices that you have undertaken and I have promised. – From my house at Holt Castle, 29 July.
320-325 Retrieved 2 June 2013. He accompanied Charles V's army when the Emperor invaded Guyenne in December 1523.Letters Patent, 17 May 1523, JER/260, Norfolk Record Office Retrieved 2 June 2013. While Jerningham was in Spain, Wolsey wrote to him on 4 December 1523 advising that 'the King's Highness, in consideration of your travails and pains sustained there, hath appointed you to be his Vice Chamberlain, and the same office doth keep and reserve for you purposely till your coming and return'.
Picto was Lady Dudley's maid and Thomas Blount asked whether she thought what had happened was "chance or villany": > she said by her faith she doth judge very chance, and neither done by man > nor by herself. For herself, she said, she was a good virtuous gentlewoman, > and daily would pray upon her knees; and divers times she saith that she > hath heard her pray to God to deliver her from desperation. Then, said I, > she might have an evil toy [suicide] in her mind.
The Isle of Man's highest judicial officers, the Deemsters, participate in the ceremony, wearing scarlet robes and long wigs. There are currently three Deemsters, including the First and Second Deemster. Their office is of great antiquity, as is reflected by the curious phraseology of their ancient oath, during which they promise to "execute the laws of this isle justly … betwixt party and party, as indifferently as the herring's backbone doth lie in the midst of the fish." Some individuals are invited to attend as Guests of Honour.
Ray & Anita live, 2016 On 11 July 2012, it was announced that Ray & Anita would be working again with Belgian producer De Coster under the name 2 Unlimited. On 30 March 2013, Slijngaard and Doth performed their first full concert as 2 Unlimited with their band in Belgium at Antwerps Sportpaleis. The duo released a remixed version of their very first single, "Get Ready for This", on 28 October 2013. The song was remixed by DJ Steve Aoki and was included on their Greatest Hits album.
" (Stow, 1st edition, p. 145). Thom's editorial comment: Pigs have long been placed under the protection of St. Anthony. "The bristled hogges doth Anthonie preserve and cherish well," says Barnabe Googe in The Popish Kingdom, fol. 95. And in The World of Wonders is the following epigram upon the subject: ::"Once fed'st thou, Anthony, an herd of swine, ::And now an herd of monkes thou feedest still; ::For wit and gut alike both charges bin; ::Both loven filth alike; both like to fill ::Their greedy paunch alike.
In William Shakespeare’s play A Midsummer Night's Dream he refers to woodbine/honeysuckle twice: #(Act II Scene 1) "Quite overcanopied with luscious woodbine" #(Act IV Scene 1) "So doth the woodbine the sweet honeysuckle gently entwine" It seems probable that the first quotation is referring to the honeysuckle L. periclymenum, a common sight in hedgerows in Shakespeare’s time. The second quotation is somewhat more confusing. It is thought that on this occasion, "woodbine" refers to a species of Convolvulus, also very common but nowadays called "bindweed".
"Workaholic" is a song recorded by Dutch Eurodance band 2 Unlimited. It was released in April 1992 as the third single from their debut album, Get Ready!. The album version was an instrumental track but the released version featured a chorus from Anita Doth and, outside the UK, verses from Ray Slijngaard. The single scored chart success in many countries, with its highest peaks coming in Finland, the Republic of Ireland, the United Kingdom and Zimbabwe, where it hit number-one in August 1992.
Arthurus Bassett armiger filius eius primogenit(us) debitae gratitudinis et observantiae ergo H(oc) M(onumentum) M(atri)? M(aerens) P(osuit) Anno Domini 1635 aetatis suae 64 ad Dominum remeaunt. Should monuments goe by merit then surely thine, With pretious stone and orient pearle should shine, But since thy world of worth ye world doth know, This marble stone may serve thy name to show. "Many are the afflictions of the righteous but the Lord delivereth him out of them all". Psal. 34.19.
In his government here he proved to be an able ruler. "The lord deputy of Ireland", wrote Sir Thomas Roe to Elizabeth of Bohemia, "doth great wonders and governs like a king, and hath taught that kingdom to show us an example of envy, by having parliaments and knowing wisely how to use them." He reformed the administration, summarily dismissing the inefficient English officials. He succeeded in so manipulating the parliaments that he obtained the necessary grants, and secured their co- operation in various useful legislative enactments.
Republic initially trumpeted the film as an important work but decided it did not care for the Scottish accents and held up general release for almost a year after early negative press reaction, including Lifes comment that Welles's film "doth foully slaughter Shakespeare." Welles left for Europe, while co-producer and lifelong supporter Richard Wilson reworked the soundtrack. Welles returned and cut 20 minutes from the film at Republic's request and recorded narration to cover some gaps. The film was decried as a disaster.
426-429, p. 426. In 1453-54 title to the manors of Rathmore and Maynooth were disputed between the Butlers of Ormond and the FitzGeralds. The Earl of Ormond was then Lord Lieutenant. A letter from the chief persons in Kildare to the Duke of York complained that the dispute: 'hath caused more destructionne in the said counte of Kildare and liberte of Mith within short time now late passed and dayly doth, then was done by Irish enemys and English rebelles of long tyme before.
For example, he argued repeatedly that there are no incorporeal substances, and that all things, including human thoughts, and even God, heaven, and hell are corporeal, matter in motion. He argued that "though Scripture acknowledge spirits, yet doth it nowhere say, that they are incorporeal, meaning thereby without dimensions and quantity".Human Nature I.XI.5. (In this view, Hobbes claimed to be following Tertullian.) Like John Locke, he also stated that true revelation can never disagree with human reason and experience,Leviathan III.xxxii.2.
He discovered that ants were sensitive to light in the near ultraviolet range of the electromagnetic spectrum. The following verse from Punch of 1882 captured him perfectly: Lord Avebury speaking during the presentation of the first replica of Diplodocus carnegii to the trustees of the British Museum of Natural History, 12 May 1905 :How doth the Banking Busy Bee, :Improve his shining Hours? :By studying on Bank Holidays, :Strange insects and Wild Flowers! He corresponded extensively with Charles Darwin, who lived nearby in Down House.
A complicated scheme for the distribution of bibles in five counties was to come into effect "if the propagation of the gospel in the Eastern parts totally faileth, or doth not considerably succeed and prosper". A sum of £150 is left towards rebuilding the parish church of Wilsthorpe, Lincolnshire; £150 each for the benefit of the communities of French and Dutch refugees; and £10 each to eight presbyterian ministers. A bequest of £10 to William Whiston was revoked by the first codicil. Brocklesby left two libraries.
As Hamlet, Gertrude, Claudius and others watch the play-within-the-play, the Player Queen, representing Gertrude, declares in flowery language that she will never remarry if her husband dies. Hamlet then turns to his mother and asks her, "Madam, how like you this play?", to which she replies ironically, "The lady doth protest too much, methinks", meaning that the Player Queen's protestations of love and fidelity are too excessive to be believed. The quotation comes from the Second Quarto edition of the play.
The following is the full English text of the Psalm from the King James Bible. :(To the chief Musician on Neginoth, Maschil, A Psalm of David, :when the Ziphims came and said to Saul, Doth not David hide himself with us?) # Save me, O God, by thy name, and judge me by thy strength. # Hear my prayer, O God; give ear to the words of my mouth. # For strangers are risen up against me, and oppressors seek after my soul: they have not set God before them. Selah.
In stating "O'er all th' Italian fields where still doth sway/ The triple tyrant", a reference is made to the triple-crown Papal Tiara, which was a symbol of Papal authority, and to the Papal dominance of the Italy. The closing line, referring to "the Babylonian woe", references the figure known as the Whore of Babylon, from Revelation 17, which describes her as being 'drunk on the blood of the saints'; the Reformation era Protestant interpretation of this figure was that the Catholic Church was the Whore of Babylon, which was persecuting the saints.
" From (KJV): :"For a good tree bringeth not forth corrupt fruit; neither doth a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. For every tree is known by his own fruit. For of thorns men do not gather figs, nor of a bramble bush gather they grapes. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is evil: for of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh.
Until the passing of the Toleration Act received royal assent in 1689 Quakers in Sussex and elsewhere had suffered considerable persecution, many of whom were imprisoned in Horsham Jail. While living at Warminghurst, Penn too was persecuted for his Quaker faith. The 1684 Chichester Quarter Sessions recorded that William Penn "being a factitious and seditious person doth frequently entertain and keep an unlawful assemblage and conventicle in his dwelling house at Warminghurst to the terror of the King's liege people." Penn sold the estate, at Warminghurst, to a James Butler in 1707.Lower.
Notwithstanding, every man ought, of such things as he possesseth, liberally to give alms to the poor, according to his ability. Article XXV - Of a Christian Man's Oath As we confess that vain and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Jesus Christ and James his apostle, so we judge that the Christian religion doth not prohibit, but that a man may swear when the magistrate requireth, in a cause of faith and charity, so it be done according to the prophet's teaching, in justice, judgment, and truth.
William Shakespeare used this owl's calls in Love's Labour's Lost (Act 5, Scene 2) as "Then nightly sings the staring owl, Tu- whit; Tu-who, a merry note, While greasy Joan doth keel the pot", but this stereotypical call is actually a duet, with the female making the kew-wick contact call. The male's response to the females kewick contact call is more varied, sometimes muffled and fluting notes, sometimes wavering or crooning notes and sometimes a more dissimilar hissing chruuuuuu.Southern, H.N. (1970). The Natural Control of a Population of Tawny Owl (Strix aluco).
Hamlet insists on performing the tragedy. Thus, the play within a play becomes a trap for Hamlet (rather than Claudius). ;Tableau III Rosencrantz tells the king and queen that Hamlet has chosen a tragedy but intends to play it for laughs. Before the play begins, Hamlet instructs his players on his (and W. S. Gilbert's) theory of comic acting: > "I hold that there is no such antick fellow as your bombastical hero who > doth so earnestly spout forth his folly as to make his hearers believe that > he is unconscious of all incongruity".
Richard Tarlton with his pipe and tabor. All images of Tarleton derive from this illustration depicting him in manuscript Harley 3885, an Alphabet book, with English or Latin phrases. The original contains the verse: "The picture here set down, / Within this letter T, / Aright doth shew the form and shape / Of Tharlton unto thee" Richard Tarlton (died September 1588), was an English actor of the Elizabethan era. He was the most famous clown of his era, known for his extempore comic doggerel verse, which came to be known as "Tarltons".
The third verse of Book 1 refers to the rivers Boyd and Avon, and the villages of Doynton and Wick: :And thou sweet Boyd that with thy watry sway :Dost wash the cliffes of Deington and of Weeke :And through their Rockes with crooked winding way :Thy mother Avon runnest soft to seeke :In whose fayre streames the speckled Trout doth play :The Roche the Dace the Gudgin and the Bleeke :Teach me the skill with slender Line and Hooke :To take each Fish of River Pond and Brooke.
Corbett is unable to obtain work that is not a variation on his cockney rag and bone man persona. At the start, Corbett as Richard II had spoken the words "I wasted time and now doth time waste me," and at the end he says them to himself as he awaits his cue in a live recording of Steptoe and Son. Finally Corbett is depicted as unable to find any work except pantomime or a stage version of Steptoe in Australia. This, however, was untrue, as Corbett appeared in several films in the late 1970s.
"In Da Name Of Love" is a dance song released and written by Ray Slijngaard, Anita Doth, Robin Morssink & Jan van der Toorn. It is their first song released under the name Ray & Anita, the duo having previously most famously been the vocalists for the eurodance band 2 Unlimited. It premiered on Radio 538 on 5 January 2010, and was officially released on iTunes Holland Store on 8 January. On their YouTube page, Spinnin' Records announced that the full release on CD Single would be available on January 22.
Giacomo IV Crispo (died 1576) was the last Duke of the Archipelago in 1564–1566. He succeeded his father Giovanni IV Crispo (r. 1517–64). In reality, he acknowledged himself in a letter from 1565 that he had little power: "We are now tributaries of the great emperor, Sultan Suleyman, and we are in evil plight, because of the difficulties of the times ; for now necessity reigns with embarrassment and pain for her ministers ; and, like plenipotentiaries or commissioners of others, we husband our opportunities as fate doth ordain."Miller, William.
A 1678 work published anonymously ("by a Protestant") in defense of John Howe against the attack of his fellow- dissenter, the severe Calvinist Thomas Danson, is also probably by Marvell. Its full title is Remarks upon a late disingenuous discourse, writ by one T.D. under the pretence de causa Dei, and of answering Mr. John Howe's letter and postscript of God's prescience, &c.;, affirming, as the Protestant doctrine, that God doth by efficacious influence universally move and determine men to all their actions, even to those that are most wicked.
Keightley also published an unannotated edition of Shakespeare (6 vols. 1864), followed by a study guide entitled Shakespeare Expositor: an aid to the perfect understanding of Shakespeare's plays (1867). Keightley is credited with first noticing that Chaucer's Squire's Tale is paralleled by, and hence may have drawn from, the Old French romance, Adenes Le Roi's Cléomadès.Tales and Popular Fictions (1834) () He also wrote of Henry Fielding's peculiarism of using the antiquated "hath" and "doth" ( Fraser's Magazine, 1858), without acknowledging a commentator who made the same observation before him.
In both 1538 and 1546 her father petitioned for her to be married to Thomas Seymour. The King gave his approval for the match, but her brother, Henry, Earl of Surrey, objected strongly, as did the Duchess herself; and the marriage did not take place. Surrey then suggested that the Duchess should seduce the aged King, her father-in-law, and become his mistress, to "wield as much influence on him as Madame d'Etampes doth about the French King". The Duchess, outraged, said she would "cut her own throat" rather than "consent to such villainy".
In a late folktale recorded in Scotland, the following physical description is provided: > "Then Angus mounted his white steed and rode eastward...He was clad in > raiment of shining gold, and from his shoulders hung his royal robe of > crimson which the wind uplifted and spread out in gleaming splendour athwart > the sky." Then a bard composed the following song about Angus: > Angus hath come - the young the fair, The blue-eyed god with golden hair - > The god who to the world doth bring, This morn the promise of the spring..
The speaker is saying that is wrong and deceives the friend's own self if he decides to remain single and childless. Line 11 also contains a sexually suggestive play on words when the speaker says "having traffic with thyself alone". The idea of being alone is used by the speaker as being the pathetic alternative to marrying and having a family. The speaker seems to personify nature in the first quatrain in saying: "Nature's bequest gives nothing, but doth lend, / And being frank, she lends to those are free" (lines 3–4).
In the dramatist Ben Jonson's masque The Gypsies Metamorphosed (1621), the Second Gypsy addresses Lady Purbeck (who was among the original audience) as follows: > Help me wonder; here's a Book Where I would for ever look; Never yet did > Gypsy trace Smoother lines in Hand or Face; Venus here doth Saturn move That > you should be Queen of Love … You shall turn all hearts to tinder, And shall > make the world one cinder.The Works of Ben Jonson, ed. W. Gifford (9 vols, > London, 1816), vol. 7, Masques at Court, p. 390.
Nasturtiums were once commonly known as "Indian cresses" because they were introduced from the Americas, known popularly then as the Indies, and used like cress as salad ingredients. In his herbal, John Gerard compared the flowers of the "Indian Cress" to those of the forking larkspur (Consolida regalis) of the buttercup family. He wrote: "Unto the backe part (of the flower) doth hange a taile or spurre, such as hath the Larkes heele, called in Latine Consolida regalis." J. R. R. Tolkien commented that an alternative anglicization of "nasturtium" was "nasturtian".
It has been said that those bodies of the Embodied soul which is eternal, indestructible and infinite, have an end. (Mahabharata, Book 6, Chapter 26) As a man, casting off robes that are worn out, putteth on others that are new, so the Embodied (soul), casting off bodies that are worn out, entereth other bodies that are new. Weapons cleave it not, fire consumeth it not; the waters do not drench it, nor doth the wind waste it. It is incapable of being cut, burnt, drenched, or dried up.
Joseph Keppler (Puck, 1877) depicts Roscoe Conkling as Mephistopheles, watching as Rutherford B. Hayes strolls off with the prize of the "Solid South" personified as a woman. The caption quotes Goethe's Faust: "Unto that Power he doth belong Which only doeth Right while ever willing Wrong." The Compromise of 1877 was an unwritten deal, informally arranged among U.S. Congressmen, that settled the intensely disputed 1876 presidential election. It resulted in the United States federal government pulling the last troops out of the South, and formally ending the Reconstruction Era.
In 1538 the Shrine of St Swithun in Winchester Cathedral was destroyed, and in 1539 the monastery was dissolved. St Swithun upon Kingsgate became a parish church. The East wall niche, which today lies empty, most likely once held a statue of St Swithun, which was probably destroyed at this time. By the 17th century the church had fallen into disrepair, and had become home to one Robert Allen, the porter of Kings Gate, and his wife, "who did and doth keep swine at ye ende of the Chapell".
David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p. 83 Under the year 1631 in colony records William Bradford wrote "Mr. Allerton doth wholly desert them (the people of Plymouth Colony) having brought them into the briars, he leaves them to get out as they can … and sets up a trading house behind Penobscot to cut off trade from there also."Robert S. Wakefield, F.A.S.G. and Margaret Harris Stover, CG., Mayflower Families through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth, Mass.
The Club, between 1901 and 1964, produced annual handbooks in which the itinerary of the club's rambles would be produced alongside geology, Toponymy and local history. Melanie Tebbutt, “Rambling and Manly Identity in Derbyshire’s Dark Peak, 1880-1920,” The Historical Journal 49, 4 (2006): 1131. Until 1906, the handbooks were prefaced with the caption "The Rambler who doth own the bond of fellowship" when it was replaced with the mottos "A Rambler made is a man improved" and "The man who was never lost, never went far."Hill, Howard (1980).
Little other understanding can I > have of him. The greatness and the suddenness of the misfortune doth so > perplex me, until I do hear from you how the matter standeth, or how this > evil should light upon me, considering what the malicious world will bruit, > as I can take no rest.Adams 2002 p. 136 Lord Robert Dudley c. 1560 Retiring to his house at Kew, away from court as from the putative crime scene, he pressed for an impartial inquiry which had already begun in the form of an inquest.
"In all the Divine Dispensations the eldest son hath been given extraordinary distinctions. Even the station of prophethood hath been his birthright". "Whoso doth deviate therefrom (the Universal House of Justice) is verily of them that love discord, hath shown forth malice, and turned away from the Lord of the Covenant". Linked together all these quotes foretell of people who, clinging to doubt, will believe Abdu'l-Baha is the One foretold to lead after the 1000-year period, just as a Prophet would, instead of a new Prophet with an entirely new Covenant.
"Speak of the devil" is the short form of the English-language idiom "Speak of the devil and he doth appear" (or its alternative form "speak of the devil and he shall appear"). The form "talk of the devil" is also in use in England.'Speak of the Devil', from the Phrase Finder It is used when an object of discussion unexpectedly becomes present during the conversation. It can also be used about a topic that quickly becomes relevant, such as the onset of rain or a car breaking down.
The hip roofs were covered with thatch. The first floor would have a living room and kitchen, and sleeping quarters could be reached by ladder in the garret above. One resident inventoried his belongings of the "needful things as every planter doth, or ought to provide to go to New England:" one iron pot, one kettle, one frying pan, one grid iron, two skillets, one spit, and wooden platters, dishes, spoons, and trenchers. Later homes typically consisted of two to eight rooms with a few beds, chests, and chairs.
Welcome, ye treasures which I now receive. From dust I rise and out of nothing now awake, These brighter regions which salute my eyes, A gift from God I take, the earth, the seas, the light, the lofty skies, The sun and stars are mine: if these I prize. A stranger here, strange things doth meet, strange glory see, Strange treasures lodged in this fair world appear, Strange, all, and new to me: But that they mine should be who nothing was, That strangest is of all; yet brought to pass.
The windowes now > through which this heav'nly guest Looks over the world, and can find nothing > such, Which dare claime from those lights the name of best. Of touch they > are that without touch doth touch, Which Cupids selfe from Beauties myne did > draw: Of touch they are, and poore I am their straw. > 19 On Cupid's bow how are my heartstrings bent, That see my wrack, and yet > embrace the same? When most I glory, then I feel most shame: I willing run, > yet while I run, repent.
Three female writers responded independently to Swetnam's work, in defence of their gender. The first response was by Rachel Speght, writing under her own name. A Mouzell for Melastomus focuses on biblical material, interpreting scripture to counter Swetnam's attacks, while criticising its grammar and style. She writes, "Whoso makes the fruit of his cogitations extant to the view of all men should have his work to be as a well-tuned instrument, in all places according and agreeing, the which I am sure yours doth not" (p. 36).
I will > not now call you servants: for the servant knoweth not what his lord doth. > But I have called you friends: because all things whatsoever I have heard of > my Father, I have made known to you. You have not chosen me: but I have > chosen you; and have appointed you, that you should go, and should bring > forth fruit; and your fruit should remain: that whatsoever you shall ask of > the Father in my name, he may give it you. These things I command you, that > you love one another.
In three separate letters to Cromwell the Duchess repeated the accusation that the Duke had 'set his women to bind me till blood came out at my fingers' ends, and pinnacled me, and sat on my breast till I spit blood, and he never punished them'.. Howard responded to the allegations by writing that 'I think the apparent false lies were never contrived by a wife of her husband that she doth daily increase of me'.; ; . Continued cohabitation was clearly impossible, and on 23 March 1534. Howard forced a separation.
Provided, The said Alexander Shepard Jr. shall deliver in to this Court to their acceptance, on or before the last day of September next, an accurate map of all the late Province of Maine, therein distinguishing the appropriated from the unappropriated lands, the lines of the several counties, all the rivers, distinguishing how far navigable, all the islands, towns, harbors, rocks, shoals, inlets, creeks, bays, lakes, promontories, capes, mountains, peninsulas, etc. in said Province. Provided, Also the said grantee settle ten families in said tract within ten years ; and also that said tract doth not interfere with any former grant. March 7, 1777.
The left-hand wing shows Mary dressed in a violet-white robe, looking at the infant Christ as he returns her gaze. Beside them a seated Saint Joseph is dressed in red with a long head-dress, dozing as he leans on a staff. The hem of Mary's robe is inscribed in golden script containing text from the "Canticle of Mary" of Luke 1:46–48.; My soul doth magnify the Lord....Chipps Smith, 172–173 This panel was long assumed to be a Nativity until described by art historian Erwin Panofsky as a simple representation of the Holy Family.
The river has captured the imagination of several authors and poets, particularly since in very hot summers the river channel can become dry between Dorking and Leatherhead (most recently during the 1976 drought). Title-page of The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser, published in 1590. In The Faerie Queene (first published in 1590) Edmund Spenser wrote of the river: > :And Mole, that like a nousling mole doth make :His way still under ground > till Thamis he overtake.The Fairie Queen, book 4, canto 11, verse 32 Title-page of Poly-Olbion by Michael Drayton, published in 1612.
How Doth the Simple Spelling Bee is a short story by Owen Wister that was published in book form in 1907. It is a satire about spelling reform efforts of the time, which also humorously and in a good-natured manner pokes fun at academia in general, and the folly of typical professors' endeavours. The story's protagonist is Chickle University professor Masticator B. Fellow, and is about his efforts to enlist the story narrator's support for spelling reform. Fellow advocates spelling all English words in a simpler, phonetic manner in order to make spelling easier for children and foreigners.
The phrase "the free offer" has not always been used in the same way throughout history. One historical usage is found in the Westminster Shorter Catechism, Question 31, "What is Effectual Calling" which ends "he doth persuade and enable us to embrace Jesus Christ, freely offered to us in the gospel."Westminster Shorter Catechism Due to its presence in the commonly used catechism, this phrase would for centuries have been familiar to most Scottish Christians and to some in other countries as well. In this context, the phrase is used in connection with God's elect, whom he effectually calls.
Another explanation for the origin of the phrase suggests that it may be related to the mourning caps worn as early as the 16th century. A mourning cap or 'Mary Stuart Cap' is a cap which features a very distinctive triangular fold of cloth in the middle of the forehead, creating an artificial widow's peak. The use of peak referring to a point in the cloth covering the forehead dates to at least 1509 when it appears in Alexander Barclay’s The Shyp of Folys: > And ye Jentyl wymen whome this lewde vice doth blynde Lased on the backe: > your peakes set a loft.
And submission to the instituted order and > administration of Christ's Testament, is an ordained confession of this > believing in him, in a professed subjection to him. This confession doth > Christ therefore require of such as believe in him, and ownes no believing > unto salvation in his new Testament, once confirmed by his death, where this > is refused….If there be no baptising into Christ, then is there not > confession of Christ, according to his appointment, then no faith to > salvation by Christ, expresly owned. A truly orthodox confession, arising from true faith, would, according to Spilsbury, certainly culminate in true baptism.
Reflecting on her loneliness she tries to recite an old song, Issac Watts's Against Idleness and Mischief, but instead ends up reciting a bizarre parody, How Doth the Little Crocodile. After seeing the crocodile from the poem appear, a startled Alice falls into a pool of her own tears, where she meets a mouse who is offended by both cats and dogs. Despite being afraid of Alice's remarks on both subjects the mouse invites her to listen to his history when they reach the shore. On the shore Alice meets several animals who appear quite familiar to her.
Gilpin published a translation of the Apiarium Romanum (1571) by Philip von Marnix, seigneur de St. Aldegonde. The first edition was entitled The Beehive of the Romishe Churche,The Beehive of the Romishe Churche. Wherein the author, a zealous Protestant, under the person of a superstitious Papist, doth so driely refell the grose opinions of Popery, and so divinely defend the articles of Christianitie, that (the Sacred Scriptures excepted) there is not a booke to be founde either more necessarie for thy profite, or sweeter for thy comforte. Translated out of Dutch into Englishe by George Gilpin the Elder, 1579.
Cyriack, this three years' day these eyes, though clear To outward view of blemish or of spot, Bereft of light, their seeing have forgot; Nor to their idle orbs doth sight appear Of sun or moon or star throughout the year, Or man or woman. Yet I argue not Against Heav'n's hand or will, not bate a jot Of heart or hope, but still bear up and steer Right onward. What supports me, dost thou ask? The conscience, friend, to have lost them overplied In liberty's defence, my noble task, Of which all Europe talks from side to side.
This was to be paid in three annual installments. By an act of the Massachusetts Legislature approved April 1, 1788, it was provided that "this Commonwealth doth hereby agree, to grant, sell & convey to Oliver Phelps and Nathaniel Gorham, for a purchase price of $1,000,000, payable in three equal annual installments all the Right, Title & Demand, which the said Commonwealth has in & to the said 'Western Territory' ceded to it by the Treaty of Hartford." But first Phelps and Gorham had to go up against competing companies and persuade the Iroquois to give up their title to the land.
Johann Sebastian Bach composed the secular cantata ' (Time, which day and year doth make), BWV134.1, BWV134a', while he was in the service of the court of Leopold, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen. Bach wrote the work as a serenata for the celebration of New Year's Day 1719. The libretto by Christian Friedrich Hunold, an academic at the University of Halle, takes the form of a dialogue between two allegorical figures, Time and Divine Providence, representing the past and future, respectively. Bach set the words in eight movements consisting of alternating recitatives and arias, culminating in a choral finale.
Slijngaard in 2014 Slijngaard and his former 2 Unlimited colleague Anita Doth reunited on 11 April 2009, to perform together for the first time in 13 years at the "I love the 90s" concert in Hasselt, Belgium. Further gigs followed on 30 April at the Radio 538 Queen's Day concert at Museumplein in Amsterdam, and as a support act for Milk Inc. at the Sportpaleis in Antwerp on 25 September. Performing under the name Ray & Anita, it was confirmed on 29 December that the duo would release a new single together in 2010, titled "In Da Name of Love".
"The Magic Friend" is a song recorded by Dutch Eurodance band 2 Unlimited. It was released in August 1992 as the fourth and final single from their debut album, Get Ready!. The UK release once again omitted Ray Slijngaard's rap, which lasted for 16 bars three times through, but did include some of the vocals from Anita Doth, with the "mocking chorus echoes" being abandoned as only Ray's part remains, thus leaving Anita's sole vocals as "disembodied whispers" during the middle eight. The single scored chart success in many European countries with its highest peak coming in Finland where it topped the charts.
In his Advancement of Learning (1605), Francis Bacon wrote that natural science "doth make inquiry, and take consideration of the same natures : but how? Only as to the material and efficient causes of them, and not as to the forms." Using the terminology of Aristotle, Bacon demands that, apart from the "laws of nature" themselves, the causes relevant to natural science are only efficient causes and material causes, or, to use the formulation which became famous later, natural phenomena require scientific explanation in terms of matter and motion. In The New Organon, Bacon divides knowledge into physics and metaphysics:Bacon, Francis. 1620.
The work opens with a short instrumental introit in G major, marked "Bright and joyful", alternating between 3/8 and 3/4 time. Simple polyrhythms are achieved by dividing the 3/4 measure in two for the orchestra and in three for the chorus. While Bach structured the first verses of the canticle in several movements of different scoring, Rutter unites the first three verses in one choral movement, treating the different ideas to different motifs and setting, and repeating the first verse at the end as a recapitulation. The soprano and alto enter in unison ' (My soul doth magnify [the Lord]).
Sir Henry Umton stated that King Henry was full of praise for Williams and his men, "I never heard him give more honour to any service nor to any man than he doth to Sir Roger Williams and the rest".Motley, John Lothrop, History of the United Netherlands: From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Years' Truce - 1609, Cambridge University Press, 2011, p.145. He returned to England permanently in 1594, but broken in health he died the following year and his death elicited a great show of public mourning. He left his property to the Earl of Essex.
This teaching of theirs, Paul tells us, had overthrown the faith of some. It would also overthrow Christian faith altogether, for if the dead are not raised, neither is Christ risen from the dead, and "ye are yet in your sins" The denial of the resurrection of the body, whether of mankind generally or of Christ, is the overthrow of the faith. It leaves nothing to cling to, no living Christ, who saves and leads and comforts His people. The apostle proceeds to say that teaching of this kind "eats as doth a gangrene," and that it increases unto more ungodliness.
Thus, in some Protestant traditions, concupiscence is evil in itself. The Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England state that "the Apostle doth confess, that concupiscence and lust hath of itself the nature of sin". By contrast, Catholicism, while also maintaining that humanity's original nature is good (CCC 374), teaches that even after this gift was lost after the Fall, human nature still cannot be called evil, because it remains a natural creation of God. Despite the fact that humans sin, Catholic theology teaches that human nature itself is not the cause of sin, although once it comes into contact with sin it may produce more sin.
Some led us and laid our hands upon them, and > then they said they were well and that we were guilty of afflicting them; > whereupon we were all seized, as prisoners, by a warrant from the justice of > the peace and forthwith carried to Salem. The Rev. John Hale explained how this supposedly worked: "the Witch by the cast of her eye sends forth a Malefick Venome into the Bewitched to cast him into a fit, and therefore the touch of the hand doth by sympathy cause that venome to return into the Body of the Witch again".John Hale, A Modest Enquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft, 1696. p. 59.
Vincent joined the EIC as a factor in 1622 at a salary of £20 per annum. In 1667 he was appointed to the company's governing council in Hooghly, becoming third in seniority at the Bay of Bengal factories in 1669. Following the death of John Marsh, he became Chief at Cassimbazar, arousing the wrath of Joseph Hall who said that Vincents "Actions will not admit of the Light, being works of Darkness's and therefore all he doth in the Companys Affairs must be in hugger muggur." Nevertheless, on the death of Walter Clavell Vincent became "Chief of the factories in the Bay of Bengal".
Isles of Amnesia: The History, Geography, and Restoration of America's Forgotten Pacific Islands. University of Hawai'i Press, Latitude 20. Page 106. . Thurston formally gave Kingman to the United States by reading this declaration on shore: > Be it known to all people: That on the tenth of May, A.D. 1922, the > undersigned agent of the Island of Palmyra Copra Co., Ltd., landed from the > motorship Palmyra doth, on this tenth day of May, A.D. 1922, take formal > possession of this island, called Kingman Reef, situated in longitude 162 > degrees 18' west and 6 degrees 23' north, on behalf of the United States of > America and claim the same for said company.
" The prophets, in reply, rebuked the community, saying: "Our Lord doth know that we have been sent on a mission to you: "And our duty is only to proclaim the clear Message." The Quran goes onto say that the prophets were threatened with stoning and torture, but they refused to give in and continued to warn the people to end their sinful ways. Then, from the farthest part of the city, there came running a man who exhorted the people to believe the message and told them: "O my people! Obey the messengers: "Obey those who ask no reward of you (for themselves), and who have themselves received Guidance.
Simpson, 'Parish of St Peter', p. 261 (Internet Archive). The churchwardens also had responsibility for the stocks, which were repaired in 1603. In 1601 John Ashbell is the minister, whose Crown appointment to the benefice of Abberton, Worcestershire (into which he entered in 1600) lapsed in 1602, when Ralph Sheldon presented another candidate.CCEd, Appointment Records ID 195230 and ID 195249. The new century begins with John Stow's antiquarian retrospect, which tells us (1603) that it is "a proper church, lately new builded", and states that the monument to Augustine Hynde "doth yet remaine, the others be gone".Stowe, Svrvay (1603 edition), p. 316 (Google).
Faith is the Principle of > Spiritual Life and Motion; every true good Work and Exercise of Grace take > their Rise and Vigor from Faith. A Christian prays, reads, and meditates, > hears, hopes, loves, is zealous for God, and doth good to others; Why? > because he believes. What is Repentance and godly Sorrow, but the Soul acted > by Faith upon the Belief of the Sinfulness of Sin, its Opposition and > Contradiction to God; and of the high Obligations we are under to avoid it, > and of the Misery we run into by venturing upon it, and of the Madness and > Folly of ruining our selves by it.
Fineman writes that "the difference between outward and inward is secured and reconciled because the vision of the eye and the thinking of the heart can be harmoniously apportioned between the clear-cut opposition of the clear eye's moiety and the dear heart's part." In essence, they both want different parts of the same thing, and thus should function in harmony instead of in conflict. Both Sonnets 46 and 47 use the idea of a picture to describe the physical appearance of the young man. Sonnet 46 states, "Mine eye my heart thy picture's sight would bar" while Sonnet 47 says, "With my love's picture then my eye doth feast".
Sonnet 28 is an English or Shakespearean sonnet. It consists of 14 lines arranged by the rhyme scheme to form three quatrains (lines 1–12) and a couplet (lines 13–14). The rhyme scheme is ABAB CDCD EFEF GG. It is written in iambic pentameter, a metre based on five feet in each line, with each foot containing two syllables accented weak/strong: × / × / × / × / × / But day by night and night by day oppressed, (28.4) The two lines of the couplet, and perhaps lines ten and twelve, each has a final extra syllable or feminine ending: × / × / × / × / × / (×) But day doth daily draw my sorrows longer, (28.13) :/ = ictus, a metrically strong syllabic position. × = nonictus.
Its humor may have contributed to its popularity; for example, Priestley illustrated the couplet with this rhyme: ::Beneath this stone my wife doth lie: ::She's now at rest, and so am I.Qtd. in Jackson, 51. Priestley also quoted from the most famous English authors, encouraging the middle-class association between reading and pleasure, a reading that would also, Priestley hoped, foster morality. Priestley's innovations in the teaching and description of English grammar, particularly his efforts to dissociate it from Latin grammar, made his textbook revolutionary and have led 20th century scholars to describe him as "one of the great grammarians of his time."Qtd.
The story of Luther's being moved to tears when he first heard this hymn, from a beggar outside his window in Wittenberg, has been retold by many authors. The 11th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, lists "Salvation now has come for all" as one of the Lutheran hymns "which at the time produced the greatest effect, and are still best remembered." It has been translated into English by many authors, including Miles Coverdale ("Now is our health come from above," 1539), Henry Mills ("Our whole salvation doth depend On God's free grace and Spirit," 1845), and Catherine Winkworth ("Salvation hath come down to us," 1869).
In the early days of sail, the use of signals to communicate between ships was primitive, as seen by one admiral's instructions to his fleet in 1530: > "Whensoever, and at all tymes the Admyrall doth shote of a pece of Ordnance, > and set up his Banner of Council on Starrborde bottocke of his Shippe, > everie shipps capten shall with spede go aborde the Admyrall to know his > will.", p.77, quoting from W. G. Perrin, "British flags" (Cambridge, 1922). By 1653, the Royal Navy had issued instructions by which an admiral could signal various orders by hoisting flags in various locations on his ship.
Preston (or the author of Cambyses) also wrote a broadside ballad entitled A Lamentation from Rome how the Pope doth bewayle the Rebelles in England cannot prevayle. To the tune of "Rowe well, ye mariners" (London by William Griffith, 1570; reprinted in Collier's Old Ballads, edited for the Percy Society, and in the Borderer's Table Book by Moses Aaron Richardson, vii. 154).Collier, i. 210. This ballad is written "in the person of a fly who happens to be lodged in the pope's nose when news comes about the Catholic uprising in the north of England" and describes the pope raging and hurling furniture, to the fly's terror.
An example of the legal sanction granted can be found in a Massachusetts Bay Colony law dated May 7, 1662: "This Court doth Order, as an encouragement to persons to destroy Woolves, That henceforth every person killing any Woolf, shall be allowed out of the Treasury of that County where such woolf was slain, Twenty shillings, and by the Town Ten shillings, and by the County Treasurer Ten shillings: which the Constable of each Town (on the sight of the ears of such Woolves being cut off) shall pay out of the next County rate, which the Treasurer shall allow."Early American Imprints, 1st series, no. 88.
Scene 1: A town in Leicester, probably on a street Theodorus Witgood, a ruined gentleman, enters and tells how, after foolishly wasting away all his money on brothels and drunkenness in the city, he has lost all of his lands to his uncle, Pecunius Lucre a usurer. According to Witgood, Lucre's motto is: "He that doth his youth expose / To brothel, drink and danger /Let him that is nearest kin / Cheat before a stranger." Witgood says that he must now find some way to make a living for himself, and hints that he may not be averse to activities "out of the compass of the law" (i.e., illegal).
56 And next him started on the knight, I wot, A most surprising fiend, whose visage pale Was branded all about with dusky spot Made by the fiery iron, heavy bale To him that doth with impious hand assail The laws of righteous Justice; and he hight Foul Infamy, ay driv'n by Woe and Wail, And pointing Scorn of moderation light, And brazen-tongu'd Reproach, ne silent in the night. (lines 298–307) Eventually, Guyon is saved by the allegorical character Content and her allies Temp'rance, Repentance, and others. They take him mountain where he is able to come back to his senses and continue on adventuring.Roe 2005 pp.
When the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, visited Henry VIII in 1522, the inn was recorded as having twenty beds and stabling for sixty horses. The inn became a staging post for carriers in the sixteenth century and was, until 1756, the London departure point for James Pickford, of the Pickfords family business. Thomas Nashe's Have with You to Saffron-Walden alludes to this, saying "Yet have I naturally cherisht and hugt it in my bosome, even as a carrier at Bosome's Inn doth a cheese under his arms". In 1835, an aged porter at the inn, John Neat, had hanged himself for the third time.
On 1 February Howard wrote to Walsingham: "It doth appear no less by your letter but that we may assure ourselves that Scotland is the mark which they shoot at to offend us, and therefore most necessary to provide for that...for my own part, had rather be drawn in pieces with wild horses than that they should pass through Scotland and I lie here".Laughton, Volume I, pp. 56–57. On 14 February Howard again wrote to Walsingham that Elizabeth would be "no good housewife for herself" if she refused to grant James VI a pension for his support for England rather than Spain.Laughton, Volume I, p. 70.
At Tannakin's birth her body and limbs were correctly proportioned, but her face had a pig's snout, "not only a stain and blemish, but a deformed uglinesse, making all the rest loathsome, contemptible and odious to all that lookt upon her in her infancie." The midwife who had delivered the baby was sworn to secrecy, and the Skinkers raised her in a private room. She ate from a silver trough, "to which she stooped and ate, just like a Swine doth in his swilling tub". Tannakin's deformity was soon discovered, and many locals came to hear her pig-like speech or to watch her feed from the trough.
The Dettingen Te Deum is not a Te Deum in the strict sense, but a grand martial panegyric. It contains eighteen short solos and choruses, mostly of a brilliant, martial character, the solos being divided between the alto, baritone, and bass. After a brief instrumental prelude, the work opens with the triumphant, jubilant chorus with trumpets and drums ("We praise Thee, O God"), written for the five parts, the sopranos being divided into first and seconds, containing also a short alto solo leading to a closing fugue. The second number ("All the earth doth worship Thee") is also an alto solo with five-part chorus of the same general character.
As Hobbes states, "but to teach us that for the similitude of the thoughts and passions of one man, to the thoughts and passions of another, whosoever looketh into himself and considereth what he doth when he does think, opine, reason, hope, fear, etc., and upon what grounds; he shall thereby read and know what are the thoughts and passions of all other men upon the like occasions." In 1734, Alexander Pope wrote a poem entitled "An Essay on Man, Epistle II", which begins "Know then thyself, presume not God to scan, The proper study of mankind is Man."Alexander Pope begins his Essay on Man Epistle II "Know then thyself.".
After Anne was beheaded, Margaret acted as chief mourner at her small funeral. Anne had written a short farewell to Margaret inside the prayer book: :"Remember me when you do pray, ::that hope doth lead from day to day." A sketch by the famed court artist Hans Holbein has been identified as being a sketch of a Queen Anne Boleyn when she was pregnant, but current research suggests that it might have been one of the Wyatt sisters — either Margaret or her sister, Mary. Lady Margaret Lee is commemorated in Songs and Sonnets, also known as Tottel's Miscellany, a poetry anthology published by the law printer Richard Tottel in 1557.
When ordered to bow to the queen, Elizabeth I, Marocco was trained to do so; when ordered to bow to Philip II (King of Spain), the horse was trained to bare its teeth, whinny, and chase Bankes offstage. This stunt was soon thereafter imitated by other animal trainers. By 1593, John Donne had written: > But to a graue man, he doth moue no more Than the wise politique horse would > heretofore, Or thou, O Elephant, or Ape, wilt doe, When any names the k[ing] > of Spaine to you. Whether by sleight-of-hand or by the horse's own talent, Marocco was known for his unusual counting abilities.
"Anna Hume, 1644". . Philadelphia: Henry Carey Baird. pp. 58–60. Throughout the poems, Hume writes in rhyming couplets, “but each rhymed pair does not represent an individual thought; rather, her sentences bridge several couplets, and a given line of poetry usually begins mid- clause.” The following lines from “The Triumph of Death” show Hume's specific style of writing: ::The glorious Maid, whose soul to Heaven is gone ::And left the rest cold earth, she who was grown ::A pillar of true valor, and had gain’d ::Much honour by her victory, and chain’d ::That God which doth the world with terror bind, ::Using no armour but her own chaste mind.
The text is attributed to Ernst Ludwig, Duke of Saxe- Meiningen, published in a 1705 collection. The poet chose for the opening a verse of the prophet Micah, "He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" (), which is related to the famous saying of Jesus "Ye shall know them by their fruits", and "but he that doeth the will of my Father" from the Gospel. The poet connected to the image of the servant as mentioned in the Gospel of Luke, and .
The text of the first service setting for the daily service of Mattins in the Anglican church consists of two pieces: the , an ancient Latin Christian hymn; and the a setting of Psalm 100. The setting of the evening canticles, part of the Anglican daily service of Evening Prayer, consists of the (Song of Mary) and (Song of Simeon). Mary sings the Magnificat ("My soul doth magnify the Lord") on the occasion of her visit to Elizabeth, as narrated in the Gospel of Luke (). Simeon sings the Nunc dimittis ("Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace") when Jesus is presented in the temple ().
The synod of the CESA adopted the church's constitution in 1938. The draft was prepared by Howard Mowll, the Anglican Archbishop of Sydney in Australia. The preamble and declaration of the constitution includes the following statement: "The Church of England in South Africa, as a Reformed and Protestant Church, doth hereby reaffirm its constant witness against all those innovations in doctrine and worship, whereby the primitive faith hath been from time to time defaced or overlaid, and which at the Reformation, the Church of England did disown and reject."Long James Hickenbotham made an attempt to unite CESA and the Anglican Church in South Africa in 1953.
In about 1585, Cavendish was living at Tutbury Castle when the Tudor courtier Amias Paulet was making arrangements for Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots to be sent there. Cavendish was reluctant to make way for the royal prisoner, and asked £100 a year for the use of the house, or as an alternative, that Queen Elizabeth I should lend him £2,000 towards the repayment of his debts. Paulet reported to the Queen that "this is his final answer" but added that "It may be, although he doth not say it, that he will be content with the loan of £1,500". Later, however, he befriended the Scottish Queen.
Jacobi's version of Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland opens Psalmodia Germanica, 1722 In 1722 Jacobi published the first edition of his Psalmodia Germanica, or a Specimen of Divine Hymns, Translated from the High Dutch, a collection of English translations of German Lutheran hymns. The dedication to the Royal Princesses Anne, Amalia and Carolina read, "The following sheets exhibit a translation of psalmody, used in the native country of your Royal Highnesses, which (as well as other protestant countries) is blessed with those spiritual hymns, to the frequent use thereof the Apostle doth so solemnly exhort." The Psalmodica also contained two works by Isaac Watts. Three editions of Jacobi's hymnbook appeared between 1722 and 1732.
God himself, who took of the dust from all four corners of the earth with each color (red, black, white, and green), then created Adam therewith, where the soul of Adam is the image of God. Citation: "God had fashioned his (Adam's) soul with particular care. She is the image of God, and as God fills the world, so the soul fills the human body; as God sees all things, and is seen by none, so the soul sees, but cannot be seen; as God guides the world, so the soul guides the body; as God in His holiness is pure, so is the soul; and as God dwells in secret, so doth the soul".
Jack Sheppard, in Newgate Prison awaiting execution, in an engraving by George White from 1728, based on a painting by James Thornhill which has not survived. Note that Sheppard's hair is cropped and that he points toward the door.The closeness of the resemblance is praised in a poem published in the British Journal on 28 November 1724, which recites that "Thornhill, 'tis thine to gild with fame // Th' obscure, and raise the humble Name; // To make the form elude the Grave, // and Sheppard from oblivion save ... Appelles, Alexander drew, // Caesar is to Aurellius due, // Cromwell in Lilly's works doth shine, // and Sheppard, Thornhill, lives in thine." Sheppard's final period of liberty lasted just two weeks.
Also, presentments in the Titchfield Manorial Court in 1676 show that the Lord of the Manor by cutting the New River "hath taken away and doth detain" parts of the copyholds of two tenants, John Cooper and John Landy, implying that at that time the construction of the New River was recent. What archival evidence has so far come to light, together with the visible evidence on the ground, tends towards the agricultural explanation rather than the navigational one, but a final answer depends on the discovery of further evidence. In the meantime the book referenced below contains a number of papers by different writers discussing the various theories, and numerous source references.
His monument in the Church of St Peter and St Paul, Belton, comprising half statues of himself and his wife finely carved in white marble, is inscribed as follows: :He dyed 24th Nov 1679 aet(atis) 89. Shee dyed 27th Jun 1676 aet(atis) 70. M(emoriae) S(acrum) Neer the dust of his deare Father Richard Brownlow Esquire: his Eldest Son Sir John Brownlow Baronet doth deposit his own. Who for his Sincere Piety towards God; Diffusive Charity to the Poor, Conjugall affection to his Lady; Love and Liberality to his neer Relations; With his Prudent Improvement of his Paternall Patrimony; May be a fair pattern to this and After Ages to follow.
Of his hymns still in use in Swedish hymnbooks today, a few have also been translated into English and published in hymnals such as the Lutheran Book of Worship. These include——besides "Var hälsad, sköna morgonstund" ("All Hail to you, O blessed morn")——"Du som fromma hjärtan vårdar" ("Christians, while on Earth abiding") and "Vi lovar Dig, O Store Gud" ("We worship you, O God of might"), as well as Din klara sol går åter opp as "Again, Thy Glorious Sun Doth Rise". His style is described as melancholic but ravishing, often dealing with death, with frequent references and quotes from the Bible. His grand work was the long poem ', finished only about year before his death.
Inland is a Nature Reserve which is an important breeding and visiting ground for many species of birds and wildfowl (and is open to visitors at certain periods).Titchfield Haven Nature Reserve, Accessed 26-11-08 Near to the village and the haven lies the Titchfield Canal, earlier known as the New River. It has been suggested that this is the second oldest canal in England, completed in 1611 (Exeter was the first). However, as late as 1676 two tenants, John Cooper and John Landy, complained in the Manorial Court that the Lord of the Manor "by Cutting ye new River hath taken away and doth detain" parts of their copyholds, implying that in 1676 the construction was recent.
To Sophia Lindsay he wrote:"what shall I say in this great day of the Lord, wherein, in the midst of a cloud, I find a fair sunshine. I can wish no more for you, but that the Lord may comfort you, and shine upon you as he doth upon me, and give you that same sense of His love in staying in the world, as I have in going out of it."Willcock, A Scots Earl in Covenanting Times, p. 406 On the scaffold he gave a speech reiterating his opposition to "Popery", and finally joked that the guillotine, as his "inlet to glory" was "the sweetest maiden he had ever kissed".
Biofouling, especially of ships, has been a problem for as long as humanity has been sailing the oceans. The earliest written mention of fouling was by Plutarch who recorded this explanation of its impact on ship speed: "when weeds, ooze, and filth stick upon its sides, the stroke of the ship is more obtuse and weak; and the water, coming upon this clammy matter, doth not so easily part from it; and this is the reason why they usually calk their ships." The use of pitch and copper plating as anti-fouling techniques were attributed to ancient seafaring nations, such as the Phoenicians and Carthaginians (1500- 300BC). Wax, tar and asphaltum have been used since early times.
The River Boyd at Doynton His only work The Secrets of Angling was the earliest English poetical treatise on fishing. In it he wrote of a brook, River Boyd, formed from streams in his hometown of Pucklechurch, which met downstream with the River Avon: :And thou, sweet Boyd, that with thy watry sway, :Dost wash the cliffs of Deignton and of Weeke; :And through their Rockes with crooked winding way, :Thy mother Avon runnest soft to seeke; :In whose fayre streames the speckled Trout doth play. It was first published in 1613. Dennys's book was published after his death, the author identified by the initials J.D., and had been attributed to up to 6 poets.
Edwards asserted that Writer had a large share in Man's Mortalitie, an anonymous tract usually attributed to Richard Overton, in which heterodox doctrines were propounded concerning the immortality of the soul. Shortly before 1655 Writer formed the acquaintance of Richard Baxter, who described him as "an ancient man, who professed to be a seeker, but was either a juggling papist or an infidel, more probably the latter." He wrote "a scornful book against the ministry", called Jus Divinum Presbyterii, a treatise which is not extant. Baxter added that in conversation with him Writer urged that "no man is bound to believe in Christ who doth not see confirming miracles with his own eyes", anticipating David Hume's argument.
The poet says that he has not seen that the young man needed to be described in a flattering way ("painting"), and so he has not attempted it. Line 4 ("I found, or thought I found") suggests that he has been rebuked for being silent, which is also suggested in line 9 ("this silence for my sin you did impute"). "Modern quill" suggests an inadequately ordinary kind of writing, and the whole of line 7 ("How far a modern quill doth come too short") contains a sexual inadequacy pun aimed the rival poet or poets. The third quatrain is so insistent on the poet's silence ("silence" "dumb" "mute") that it suggests deliberateness.
Lord Thomas's nephew, Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, referred to his death in a poem to "his Geraldine" (Lady Elizabeth Fitsgerald):— If you be fair and fresh, am I not of your hue? And for my vaunt I dare well say, my blood is not untrue; For you yourself doth know, it is not long ago Sith that for love one of the race did end his life in woe, In Tower both strong and high, for his assured truth, Whereas in tears he spent his breath, alas, the more the ruth! This gentle beast so died, whom nothing could remove, But willingly to seek his death for loss of his true love.
New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. 424. Print. > And when he had bewept and kist the garment which he knew, > Receyve thou my bloud too (quoth he) and therewithal he drew > His sworde, the which among his guttes he thrust, and by and by > Did draw it from the bleeding wound beginning for to die, > And cast himself upon his backe, the bloud did spin on hie > As when a Conduite pipe is crackt, the water bursting out > Doth shote it selfe a great way off and pierce the Ayre about.Ovid. The > Fyrst Fower Bookes of P. Ovidius Nasos Worke, Entitled Metamorphosis, > Translated Oute of Latin into Englishe Meter. Trans. Arthur Golding.
It is inscribed in Latin as follows: :Memoriae Sacrum Dominae Elizabethae Bassett uxori Roberti Bassett militis clarissima stirpe oriundi filiae et cohaeredi Gulielmi Peryam militis Schaccarii Regii Baronis primarii Judicic integerrimi et religiosissimi piae prudenti justae patienti modestae castae temperanti constanti hospitali misericordi beneficae pauperum matri et medicae suae familiae conservatrici. Arthurus Bassett armiger filius eius primogenit(us) debitae gratitudinis et observantiae ergo H(oc) M(onumentum) M(atri)? M(aerens) P(osuit) Anno Domini 1635 aetatis suae 64 ad Dominum remeaunt. :Should monuments goe by merit then surely thine, :With pretious stone and orient pearle should shine, :But since thy world of worth ye world doth know, :This marble stone may serve thy name to show.
Moreover, Bonham's study "[in the texts at university] is practise [sic]", and to become a doctor means to be considered capable of teaching: "when a man brings with him the ensign of doctrine, there is no reason that he should be examined again, for then if thou will not allow of him, he shall not be allowed, though he is a learned and grave man, and it is not the intent of the King to make a monopoly of this practise". As such, the Act "doth not inhibit a doctor to practice [sic], but [only] punisheth him for ill using, exercising, and making [of physic]". In other words, it covered malpractice, not illicit practice.Cook (2004) p.
In the beginning, under Caliph Umar, it was a civic institution intended to supervise the course of economic and commercial affairs as well as the legality of contracts. Its foundation is based on a verse which makes a list of major interdicts. : "And come not nigh to the orphan's property, except to improve it, until he attain the age of full strength; give measure and weight with (full) justice;- no burden do We place on any soul, but that which it can bear;- whenever ye speak, speak justly, even if a near relative is concerned; and fulfil the covenant of Allah: thus doth He command you, that ye may remember." (6:152, trans.
Near a small seaport on the Italian Riviera near 16th century Genoa, the fleet weighs anchor to the sounds of a joyous song of the sailors as they heave at the windlass and spread the sail. Their brave declaration of their determination to sweep the Saracens from the sea is contrasted with the lament of the wives and mothers, sisters and sweethearts, left sorrowing on the shore. At sea, aboard one of the galleys, in the midnight watch, the thoughts and prayers of Il Marinajo go back to the loved ones left behind and invoke for them the protection of our Lady, Star of the Sea. "What doth now the maid I love?" he wonders.
Purgatorio, Canto XXIV, line 57, Longfellow translation He quotes the line "Ladies that have intelligence of love,"Purgatorio, Canto XXIV, line 51, Longfellow translation. written in praise of Beatrice, whom he will meet later in the Purgatorio: > "Ladies that have intelligence of Love, > I of my lady wish with you to speak; > Not that I can believe to end her praise, > But to discourse that I may ease my mind. > I say that when I think upon her worth, > So sweet doth Love make himself feel to me, > That if I then should lose not hardihood, > Speaking, I should enamour all mankind."La Vita Nuova, Section XIX, lines > 1–8, translated by Charles Eliot Norton.
Although the House of Lords cleared him on 8 November, the Commons came to a split decision on 20 November. It found that he had violated an agreement made with the Coventry Committee and "The Question being put, Whether this House doth concur with the Lords, in sending down the Earl of Denbigh to his Command in his Association: It passed with the Negative."House of Commons Journal Volume 3: 20 November 1644 However, Denbigh was allowed to serve on a parliamentary delegation for peace talks with the royalists. The issues between Mackworth and Denbigh were to be rehearsed again in 1649Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1649–1650, 19 December 1649, p. 444-7.
6–14 The first fully materialistic philosophy was produced by the atomists Leucippus and Democritus (5th century BCE), who attempted to explain the formation and development of the world in terms of the chance movements of atoms moving in infinite space. Euripides (480–406 BCE), in his play Bellerophon, had the eponymous main character say: > “Doth some one say that there be gods above? > There are not; no, there are not. Let no fool, > Led by the old false fable, thus deceive you.” A fragment from the lost satyr play Sisyphus, which has been attributed to both Critias and Euripides, claims that a clever man invented "the fear of the gods" in order to frighten people into behaving morally.
Wolryche, together with Sir William Whitmore, Edward Cresset and Sir Edward Acton were customers of John Birch, originally of Cannock and now a Bristol wine merchant. On 19 January they were at Bridgnorth, in the very act of making a deal, when a warrant arrived from Ottley, demanding Birch's arrest on the grounds that he "hath taken up Armes and is a disaffected p'son to our Sov'aigne Lord the Kinge and doth still persist therein as a traytor to his Royall person."Phillips (1895), p.257 Wolryche and the others wrote to Ottley the next day, offering to stand bail so that Birch could carry on his business with the local gentry until the following Thursday.
One critic, Jeffrey Richards, thought Ladd badly miscast, "playing the part like a tired American businessman prevailed upon to take the lead in a revival of Merrie England". By contrast Andrews and Bushell "played their parts for all and more than they were worth, giving every one of the pseudo-archaic line (e.g., 'Away with him, his presence doth offend our sense of honour') the full treatment: resonant Shakespearean delivery and Lyceum flourishes". A lot of footage from this film was re-used in the low-budget, 1963 matinée film Siege of the Saxons, which is also set in Arthurian times - even the short-sleeved signature armour of the Black Knight reappears for the sake of continuity.
He defends, as do many authors of that time, the writing a book on a learned subject in the vulgar tongue. He was in favour of free translation, "for if it were not permitted to translate but word for word, then I say, away with all translations". The book treats of the chemical art, a term used by Baker as synonymous with the art of distillation. Distilled medicines, he says, exceed all others in power and value, "for three drops of oil of sage doth more profit in the palsie, three drops of oil of coral for the falling sickness, three drops of oil of cloves for the cholicke, than one pound of these decoctions not distilled".
To ensure that merchants would not facilitate the return of criminals before the expiration of the latter's contracts, the law governing the transportation of felons required merchants to "enter into bonds" of £40 per servant; should a malefactor violate the contract, the merchant would be responsible for the "recompense." The merchant or captain of the ship "doth also further Covenant that he will as soon as conveniently may be procure an Authentick Certificate from the Governour or the Chief Customehouse Officer of the Place whereto they shall be so transported of the Landing of such Offenders as aforesaid." These directives were not completely followed, though; indeed, some convicts were never sent abroad.Smith, Colonists in Bondage, 99.
His treaty of 1654 with Sweden contains the first reciprocal most favored nation clause: Article IV provides that the people, subjects and inhabitants of either confederate shall have and possess in the countries, lands, dominions and kingdoms of the other as full and ample privileges, and as many exemptions, immunities and liberties, as any foreigner doth or shall possess in the dominions and kingdoms of the said confederate. The government of the Restoration replaced and enlarged the Protectorate arrangements by fresh agreements. The general policy of the Commonwealth was maintained, with further provisions on behalf of colonial trade. In the new treaty of 1661 with Sweden the privileges secured were those that any foreigner should enjoy in the dominions and kingdoms on both sides.
Ray was then asked to write lyrics and add a rap to the track. On Ray Slijngaard's suggestion, Anita Doth joined as the female vocalist. The single was an immediate success throughout Europe with notable peaks worldwide, including Australia and the U.S. It is arguably the most famous of the band's singles in the United States having charted at number 14 on the US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, number 17 on the Top 40 Mainstream and number 38 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it the band's only top-40 hit in the U.S. In the UK, this single went to number 2 on the UK Singles Chart. The song is one of the most frequently played songs at sporting events around the world.
Possibly encouraged by Northampton, Hoskins grimly hinted that the lives of these Scottish courtiers were in danger, alluding to the ethnic massacre of the Angevins in the Sicilian Vespers; this was communicated to the king as a threat to the life of himself and his closest friends, such that he likely feared himself in danger of assassination. Roe was more prescient, if somewhat melodramatic, in his judgement that the impending dissolution would be "the ending, not only of this, but of all Parliaments". The Commons issued their own ultimatum to James: if he abolished impositions, "wherewith the whole kingdom doth groan", they would give him financial support. However, James was in no position to give up such a source of income.
Richard Wilson's publications include Will Power, Secret Shakespeare, Shakespeare in French Theory, Free Will and Worldly Shakespeare. Influenced by continental philosophy, as well as Anglo-American criticism, he reads Shakespearean drama in terms of its agonistic conflict. It is his research into the conditions of this conflict that led him to his proposition, in Secret Shakespeare, that 'the bloody question' of loyalty during Europe's wars of religion was hardwired into Shakespeare's dramatic imagination, and that in play after play the same scenario is repeated, when some sovereign or seducer, like King Lear, demands to know who 'doth love us', and a resister such as Cordelia responds: 'I cannot heave / My heart into my mouth'. In this way, Shakespeare makes a drama out of 'being dumb' [Sonnet 83].
This veiled criticism of the Confessios immoral stories is not necessarily inconsistent with Chaucer's famous dubbing of his friend "Moral Gower"; that passage, in Chaucer's Troilus, was likely written before Gower even began the Confessio. Later generations have been equally unkind. The influential assessment of Puttenham (1589:50) found Gower's English verse inadequate in every respect: > Gower [...] had nothing in him highly to be commended, for his verse was > homely and without good measure, his wordes strained much deale out of the > French writers, his ryme wrested, and in his inuentions small subtilitie: > the applications of his moralities are the best in him, and yet those many > times very grossely bestowed, neither doth the substance of his workes > sufficiently aunswere the subtiltie of his titles.
The historian Rice Merrick, in describing the upland area of the Vale of Glamorgan, stated that there "was always great breeding of cattle, horses and sheep; but in elder time therein grew but small store of corn, for in most places there the ground was not thereunto apt." The English cartographer John Speed described the rearing of cattle as the "best means unto wealth that the Shire doth afford."Glamorgan County History, Volume IV, Early Modern Glamorgan from the Act of Union to the Industrial Revolution, Glanmor Williams, pp. 2–3. University of Wales Press (1974) As there was no fair held in the Rhondda the animals would be taken to neighbouring fairs and markets at Neath, Merthyr, Llantrisant, Ynysybwl and Llandaff.
Davies had fought in the trenches during this war, and was actively involved in the search for stable international order through the League of Nations and the League of Nations Union. He wanted to see the establishment of a strong International Police force so that international agreement and peace could be obtained. Born in 1880, he died on 16 June 1944, before the Second World War ended, but was continually stressing, as in a letter of 1943, "the vital importance of arousing our people to the need for an International Authority", posing the question "what doth it profit a nation if it gains the whole world and loses its own soul?" In founding this public building, Lord Davies hoped to combine the ideals of peace and health.
In some editions (like the Westminster), readers were warned that these books were not "to be any otherwise approved or made use of than other human writings." A milder distinction was expressed elsewhere, such as in the "argument" introducing them in the Geneva Bible, and in the Sixth Article of the Church of England, where it is said that "the other books the church doth read for example of life and instruction of manners," though not to establish doctrine. Among some other Protestants, the term apocryphal began to take on extra or altered connotations: not just of dubious authenticity, but having spurious or false content, not just obscure but having hidden or suspect motives. Protestants were (and are) not unanimous in adopting those meanings.
Bartholomeus Anglicus (d. 1272), in the translation of John Trevisa (1397): :"by the place of this sterre place and stedes and boundes of the other sterres and of cercles of heven ben knowen: therefore astronomers beholde mooste this sterre. Then this ster is dyscryved of the moste shorte cercle; for he is ferre from the place that we ben in; he hydeth the hugenesse of his quantite for unmevablenes of his place, and he doth cerfifie men moste certenly, that beholde and take hede therof; and therfore he is called stella maris, the sterre of the see, for he ledeth in the see men that saylle and have shyppemannes crafte."cited after J. O. Halliwell, (ed.), The Works of William Shakespeare vol.
The combined waters of all three sisters are then visible all the way down the estuary from Cheekpoint on. In ancient times, the area bounded by the Suir and the Barrow formed the Kingdom of Ossory. This name is retained today for dioceses in both the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Ireland. The first, the gentle Shure that making way By sweet Clonmell, adorns rich Waterford; The next, the stubborne Newre, whose waters gray, By faire Kilkenny and Rosseponte boord, The third, the goodly Barow, which doth hoorde Great heaps of Salmons in his deepe bosome: All which long sundred, doe at last accord To ioyne in one, ere to the sea they come, So flowing all from one, all one at last become.
Holland was well regarded in his lifetime, both for the quantity and quality of his translations. A piece of doggerel, composed after the publication of Suetonius's Historie in 1606 (and playing on Suetonius's cognomen), ran: > Phil: Holland with translations doth so fill us, > He will not let Suetonius be Tranquillus Thomas Fuller, writing in the mid-17th century, included Holland among his Worthies of England, terming him "the translator general in his age, so that those books alone of his turning into English will make a country gentleman a competent library for historians.". However, his colloquial language soon dated. John Aubrey, reading his translations of Livy and Pliny as an undergraduate in the 1640s, compiled lists of examples of what he saw as quaint and archaic terms.
When I want provant with Humphrey I sup, and when benighted, I repose in Paul's with waking souls Yet never am affrighted. ::But I do sing, Any food, any feeding, ::Feeding, drink, or clothing; ::Come dame or maid, be not afraid, ::Poor Tom will injure nothing. I know more than Apollo, For oft, when he lies sleeping I see the stars at bloody wars In the wounded welkin weeping; The moon embrace her shepherd, And the Queen of Love her warrior, While the first doth horn the star of morn, And the next the heavenly Farrier. ::While I do sing, Any food, any feeding, ::Feeding, drink, or clothing; ::Come dame or maid, be not afraid, ::Poor Tom will injure nothing.
Baháʼu'lláh wrote that Baháʼí authors should write in a manner as to attract souls: :"Thou hast written that one of the friends hath composed a treatise. This was mentioned in the Holy Presence, and this is what was revealed in response: Great care should be exercised that whatever is written in these days doth not cause dissension, and invite the objection of the people. Whatever the friends of the one true God say in these days is listened to by the people of the world. It hath been revealed in the Lawh-i-Hikmat: "The unbelievers have inclined their ears towards us in order to hear that which might enable them to cavil against God, the Help in Peril, the Self- Subsisting.
The decision to preserve forests to maintain rainfall was driven by the efforts of Soame Jenyns, a commissioner of the Board of Trade and Member of Parliament. Jenyns was convinced of the importance of forests for preserving rainfall through the work of Stephen Hales on plant physiology and transpiration. It took Jenyns eleven years to convince the British Parliament of the importance of the endeavour, but on 13 April 1776, Parliament passed an ordinance establishing the reserve "for the purpose of attracting frequent showers of rain upon which the fertility of lands in these climates doth entirely depend". This action produced one of the oldest protected areas in the world geared towards conservation and has been described as "the first act in the modern environmental movement".
In their individual lines, the four tenors were given music specially written for their voices, Jones's plaintive timbre following the two lyric tenors and one Heldentenor with the only downbeat line in the piece ('But whilst this muddy vesture of decay/Doth grossly close it in…'). Jones appeared at English music festivals and that of the International Society of Contemporary Music (1938). In addition to opera and oratorio, his repertoire included German Lieder, French and English songs, and contemporary music: he sang in the first performances in England of Wozzeck, Gurrelieder, Doctor Faustus and Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk. He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1957 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the King's Theatre, Hammersmith, London.
His major work is The Protestant's Evidence, showing that for 1,500 years after Christ divers Guides of God's Church have in sundry Points of Religion taught as the Church of England now doth, London, 1635. The book is in the form of a dialogue between a papist and a Protestant, and was valued by John Selden. A friend having forwarded to Birckbek a copy of his book covered with marginal glosses, which the annotator entitled An Antidote necessary for the reader thereof, an Answer to the Antidotist was appended to a second edition of the Evidence in 1657. The 1657 edition, with this appendix, was published again in 1849 in the supplement to Edmund Gibson's Preservative from Popery’ by the Reformation Society, with John Cumming as editor.
It appears to have been first used in a pejorative sense by Ben Jonson to suggest a mere tradesman fashioning works for the theatre. Jonson uses the word in his Epigram 49, which is thought to refer to John Marston: :Epigram XLIX — On Playwright :PLAYWRIGHT me reads, and still my verses damns, :He says I want the tongue of epigrams ; :I have no salt, no bawdry he doth mean ; :For witty, in his language, is obscene. :Playwright, I loath to have thy manners known :In my chaste book ; I profess them in thine own. Jonson described himself as a poet, not a playwright, since plays during that time were written in meter and so were regarded as the province of poets.
His remains may have been discarded by labourers between 1712 and 1714 when the church was rebuilt, and nothing remains of Tallis's original memorial in the church. John Strype found a brass plate in 1720 which read: > Entered here doth ly a worthy wyght, Who for long tyme in musick bore the > bell: His name to shew, was THOMAS TALLYS hyght, In honest virtuous lyff he > dyd excell. He serv’d long tyme in chappel with grete prayse Fower > sovereygnes reygnes (a thing not often seen); I meane Kyng Henry and Prynce > Edward’s dayes, Quene Mary, and Elizabeth oure Quene. He mary’d was, though > children he had none, And lyv’d in love full thre and thirty yeres Wyth > loyal spowse, whose name yclypt was JONE, Who here entomb’d him company now > beares.
All the books of the New Testament, as they are commonly received, we do receive and account canonical. Article VI - Of the Old Testament The Old Testament is not contrary to the New; for both in the Old and New Testaments everlasting life is offered to mankind by Christ, who is the only Mediator between God and man, being both God and Man. Wherefore they are not to be heard who feign that the old fathers did look only for transitory promises. Although the law given from God by Moses as touching ceremonies and rites doth not bind Christians, nor ought the civil precepts thereof of necessity be received in any commonwealth; yet notwithstanding, no Christian whatsoever is free from the obedience of the commandments which are called moral.
By 1679 Crowne was living in Boston, where he died on 24 December 1682. Below is a copy of his will. I William Crowne Esq. being very weak in body, but of sound mind and memory, and looking every day to be received to glory w'ch God hath given me some comfort of thinking fitting to set down how I would have my estate disposed of when I am dead: As concerning w't his Maj'tie hath promised to give me concerning the delivery of my right up to the French in Nova Scotia, my son John being prosecuting of it of the King, Whatsoever his Maj'tie doth bestow on me, give him the one halfe; as also the bond of four hundred and forty pounds the halfe of that.
He seems to have returned to England in 1587, and, having succeeded in securing the favour of Elizabeth's spymaster William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, he was allowed in October 1588 to return to Ireland. New Lord Deputy Sir William Fitzwilliam wrote to Burghley that he hoped that Delvin would "throughly performe that honorable and good opynion it hath pleased yr Lp. to conceave of him, wch no doubt he may very sufficiently do, and wth all do her matie great service in action, both cyvill and martiall, if to the witt wherewth God hath indued him and the loue and liking wherewth the countrey doth affect him, he applie him self wth his best endevor."State Papers, Ireland, Eliz. cxxxvii. 38. He included Delvin in his list of 'doubtful men in Ireland.
Henry VIII, consumed by paranoia and increasing illness, became convinced that Surrey had planned to usurp the crown from his son the future King Edward VI. Surrey suggested that his sister Mary FitzRoy, Duchess of Richmond and Somerset (widow of Henry's illegitimate son Henry Fitzroy) should seduce the aged King, her father-in- law, and become his mistress, to "wield as much influence on him as Madame d'Etampes doth about the French King". The Duchess, outraged, said she would "cut her own throat" rather than "consent to such villainy". She and her brother fell out, and she later laid testimony against Surrey that helped lead to his trial and execution for treason. The matter came to a head when Surrey quartered the attributed arms of King Edward the Confessor.
Wesley's conversion had a clear impact on his doctrine, especially the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. The change in doctrine can be seen in his sermons after 1738, but is most notable in his hymns written after 1738. From Charles' published work "Hymns and Prayers to the Trinity" and in Hymn number 62 he writes "The Holy Ghost in part we know, For with us He resides, Our whole of good to Him we owe, Whom by His grace he guides, He doth our virtuous thoughts inspire, The evil he averts, And every seed of good desire, He planted in our hearts." Charles communicates several doctrines: the personal indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit, the depravity of mankind, and humanity's personal accountability to God.
It is not until Theander is given medicine to "cure" him of his chastity that he sees women as existing primarily as objects meant solely for men's desire. At that point, the "unnatural" courtly and intellectual love between equals turns to "natural" physical love between a controlling man and his submissive wife. ::This bounty had been excellent, when you ::Had privilege to give, or to deny; but now ::Your charter's out of date, and mine ::Begins to rule: the Priest attends below ::To celebrate our Nuptiall rites, which is ::The happy houre that doth advance ::The husband's government; come, to the Chappell, Love. Theander and Eurithea's high-flown love is also contrasted with the physical love between Phylomont and Ariola, brother to Eurithea and sister to Theander respectively.
Aristophanes's Birds and Callimachus both evoke the bird's song as a form of poetry. Virgil compares the mourning of Orpheus to the “lament of the nightingale”. In Sonnet 102 Shakespeare compares his love poetry to the song of the common nightingale (Philomel): ::"Our love was new, and then but in the spring, ::When I was wont to greet it with my lays; ::As Philomel in summer's front doth sing, ::And stops his pipe in growth of riper days:" During the Romantic era the bird's symbolism changed once more: poets viewed the nightingale not only as a poet in his own right, but as “master of a superior art that could inspire the human poet”. For some romantic poets, the nightingale even began to take on qualities of the muse.
" It is once more suggestive that Sidney is portraying God as a more understanding being in his translation of Psalm 23. While David says he knows he will not stray because of the Lord, Sidney states that even though he may be led astray, he knows that the lord will lead him back on the right path, creating an image of a more forgiving God not found within the Old Testament. Another key alteration that Sir Philip Sidney makes is changing "the enemy", as mentioned in David's version of Psalm 23. David evokes a sense of the enemy as more than just on the battlefield, but also those who are unfaithful, sin itself and anyone who opposes Christianity, whereas Sidney changes this to the "foe", and stating " Ev'n when foe's envious eye Doth it espy.
Surviving lore concerning the rex Nemorensis indicates that this priest or king held a very uneasy position. Macaulay's quatrain on the institution of the rex Nemorensis states: : Those trees in whose dim shadow The ghastly priest doth reign The priest who slew the slayer, And shall himself be slain. This is, in a nutshell, the surviving legend of the rex Nemorensis: the priesthood of Diana at Nemi was held by a person who obtained that honour by slaying the prior incumbent in a trial by combat, and who could remain at the post only so long as he successfully defended his position against all challengers. However, a successful candidate had first to test his mettle by plucking a golden bough from one of the trees in the sacred grove.
Aside from their behaviour in the play as well as that of Teddy's family, nothing in the text contradicts the ostensible and putative reality that they are legally married and have three sons. The more outrageous, even horrifying, for the play's original audiences, the words and actions taken by Ruth, Max, and Lenny, the more Teddy protests that they are married, leading some critics to believe that the man doth protest too much. A perceptive reader and viewer of the play would wonder why Teddy would have brought his wife and the mother of his children into such a grotesque menagerie in the first place. Continuing denial of the facts of Teddy's and Ruth's marriage and children may serve critics as a means of expressing their own rejection of what occurs in the play.
There is no obvious biblical evidence that Peter was ever in Rome, but the first epistle of Peter does mention that "The church that is at Babylon, elected together with you, saluteth you; and so doth Marcus my son" (). It is not certain whether this refers to the actual Babylon or to Rome, for which Babylon was a common nickname at the time, or to the Jewish diaspora in general, as a recent theory has proposed. While the church in Rome was already flourishing when Paul wrote his Epistle to the Romans about AD 57, he greets some fifty people in Rome by name, but not Peter whom he knew. There is also no mention of Peter in Rome later during Paul's two-year stay there in , about AD 60–62.
20 In 422, Augustine of Hippo wrote about 2 Thessalonians 2:1–11, where he believed that Paul mentioned the coming of the Antichrist. Although he rejects the theory, Augustine mentions that many Christians believed Nero was the Antichrist or would return as the Antichrist. He wrote, "so that in saying, 'For the mystery of iniquity doth already work,' he alluded to Nero, whose deeds already seemed to be as the deeds of Antichrist." Some modern biblical scholars such as Delbert Hillers (Johns Hopkins University) of the American Schools of Oriental Research and the editors of the Oxford Study Bible and Harper Collins Study Bible, contend that the number 666 in the Book of Revelation is a code for Nero, a view that is also supported in Roman Catholic Biblical commentaries.
Wool made England rich, and the staple port of Norwich "in her state doth stand With towns of high'st regard the fourth of all the land", as Michael Drayton noted in Poly-Olbion (1612). The wealth generated by the wool trade throughout the Middle Ages financed the construction of many fine churches, so that Norwich still has more medieval churches than any other city in Western Europe north of the Alps. Throughout this period Norwich established wide-ranging trading links with other parts of Europe, its markets stretching from Scandinavia to Spain and the city housing a Hanseatic warehouse. To organise and control its exports to the Low Countries, Great Yarmouth, as the port for Norwich, was designated one of the staple ports under the terms of the 1353 Statute of the Staple.
Following precedent in modestly requesting to be excused, Yelverton went to extraordinary lengths to cite his unfitness for the role: > Neither from my person nor my nature doth this choice arise: for he that > supplieth this place ought to be a man big and comely, stately and well- > spoken; his voice great, his courage majestic, his nature haughty and his > purse plentiful and heavy; but, contrarily, the stature of my person is > small, myself not so well-spoken, my voice low, my carriage lawyer-like and > of common-fashion, my nature soft and bashful, and my purse thin, light, and > never yet plentiful.Lardner, quoted in Baldwin, p. 356 Notwithstanding his diffidence, Yelverton was a conspicuously successful Speaker. He exercised moderation and discretion to defuse tensions between Parliament and the Crown.
The Rolle family's voracious appetite and great skill for amassing Devon property later saw Frithelstock Priory become one of their own estates.Risdon, Tristram (died 1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.422 He was much involved in the legal affairs of Lisle's wife's dower manor of Umberleigh and in the protracted legal struggle to obtain the Beaumont inheritance due to her eldest son John Basset (1518–1541), by her first husband John Basset (1462–1528) of Umberleigh. His letter to Lady Lisle dated 25 July 1534 includes the line "Madame, also your ladyship doth know that I bought your images and scripture for Mr Basset and for that I am now paid", which refers to the still surviving monumental brasses on the tomb of her first husband in Atherington Church.
The River Boyd is a river of some in length which rises near Dodington in South Gloucestershire, England. It is a tributary of the Bristol Avon, running in a southerly direction and joining near Bitton. The flow rate at Bitton is an average . It was immortalised in the 1613 poem by John Dennys of Pucklechurch The Secrets of Angling, the earliest English poetical tract on fishing: > And thou sweet Boyd that with thy watry sway > Dost wash the cliffes of Deington and of Weeke > And through their Rockes with crooked winding way > Thy mother Avon runnest soft to seeke > In whose fayre streames the speckled Trout doth play > The Roche the Dace the Gudgin and the Bleeke > Teach me the skill with slender Line and Hooke > To take each Fish of River Pond and Brooke.
It comprises (like the hymns for Terce and Sext) only two stanzas of iambic dimeters together with a doxology, varying according to the feast or season. As in the hymns for Prime, Sext and Compline, the theme is found in the steady march of the sun, that defines the periods of the day (and provided the basis of Roman and monastic chronology): :Rerum, Deus, tenax vigor :Immotus in te permanens, :Lucis diurnæ tempora :Successibus determinans '. which translates (not literally, nor strictly by verse): :'O God, whose power unmoved the whole of Nature's vastness doth control, Who mark'st the day-hours as they run by steady marches of the sun'. The moral application is, as usual, made in the following stanza: :Largire lumen vespere 'O grant that in life's eventide' :Quo vita nusquam decidat, etc.
Though grief-stricken, Henry grasped that his fiancée's death had saved him from disaster: his plan to declare his two sons by d'Estrées heirs to the throne would have precipitated a major political crisis. The English agent Edmondes reported: > And the King himselfe doth freelie confesse it, that albeit her death is a > great grief unto him, in regard that he did so dearlie love her, and > intending as he acknowledgeth to have married her, but that God having > directlie manifested that he would not suffer him to fall into the danger of > so great an error and inconvenience to himselfe and to his state, that he > will not fail to make a lesson thereof.Quoted in Buisseret, p. 78. Henry provided Gabrielle d'Estrées with a grandiose funeral and drowned his sorrows with a sustained spree of womanising.
" Later, he is pleased to report to the Council that the Lady Elizabeth, after "hir confession in Catholyke fourme dydde receyve the most comfortable Sacramente," and before receiving she declared to Sir Henry "that she had never plotted against the Queene." The Council replied that the Queen took great pleasure in the news that the Lady Elizabeth "doth so well conforme hirself in the receyvyng off the most blessed Sacramente off the altar." In a letter to the Queen Sir Henry gives some information as to Elizabeth using the reformed prayer book, etc., and refers to Mary's recent marriage, concluding with a reference to the hope of an heir to the throne, which would be a joy to all true Englishmen, "that wee maye as holye Simeon dydde for the byrth of Chryste, prayse Godde for the same.
Because the High Court was equally divided in opinion, it granted a certificate pursuant to section 74 of the Constitution in the following form: > Pursuant to sec. 74 of the Constitution this Court doth certify that, so far > as the question whether the Parliament of the Commonwealth has power to make > laws for the compulsory examination of witnesses by Royal Commissions > touching matters which are not within the ambit of the existing legislative > powers of the Commonwealth, that is to say, such powers as may now be > exercised without an amendment of the Constitution under the provisions of > sec. 128, is a question as to the limits inter se of the constitutional > powers of the Commonwealth and those of any State or States, the question is > one which ought to be determined by His Majesty in Council.
A much greater check on the freedom of action of the popes was imposed by the Statute of Provisors (1351) and the Statute of Praemunire passed in the reign of Edward III. The former of these, after premising "that the Pope of Rome, accroaching to him the seignories of possession and benefices of the holy Church of the realm of England doth give and grant the same benefices to aliens which did never dwell in England, and to cardinals, which might not dwell here, and to others as well aliens as denizens, as if he had been patron or advowee of the said dignities and benefices, as he was not of right by the laws of England", ordained the free election of all dignities and benefices elective in the manner as they were granted by the king's progenitors.
The Commonwealth of Virginia frequently disputed the boundaries of the Fairfax Grant. In 1745, the Privy Council in London decided in favor of the 6th Lord Fairfax, designating that "the boundary of the petitioners land doth begin at the first spring of the South Branch of the River Rappahannack now called Rappidan[,] which first spring is the spring of that part of the said River Rappidan as is called in the plans returned by the name of Conway River[,] and that the said boundary be from thence drawn in a straight line North West to the place in the Allagany Mountains where that part of the River Pattawomeck alias Potowmack which is now called Cohongoroota alias Cohongoronton first arises." The imaginary line between the sources of the Conway River and the North Branch Potomac River is commonly referred to as "the Fairfax Line".
Lord Justice Avory refused leave to appeal, relying on a passage of Foster's Crown Law (1762): > "In every charge of murder, the fact of killing being first proved, all the > circumstances of accident, necessity, or infirmity are to be satisfactorily > proved by the prisoner, unless they arise out of the evidence produced > against him; for the law presumeth the fact to have been founded in malice, > until the contrary appeareth. And very right it is, that the law should so > presume. The defendant in this instance standeth upon just the same foot > that every other defendant doth: the matters tending to justify, excuse, or > alleviate, must appear in evidence before he can avail himself of them." The Attorney-General (Sir Thomas Inskip) then gave a fiat (intervention on paper) to allow an appeal to the highest court.
In Shakespeare's plays Hal has soliloques in which he says that he is self-consciously adopting a wayward lifestyle to surprise and impress people by his later apparent character transformation: :I know you all, and will awhile uphold :The unyoked humour of your idleness: :Yet herein will I imitate the sun, :Who doth permit the base contagious clouds :To smother up his beauty from the world, :That, when he please again to be himself, :Being wanted, he may be more wonder'd at. In Henry IV, Part 2, the Earl of Warwick suggests that Hal is fraternising with low-life characters to learn about human nature. He is "studying his companions" almost like learning a foreign language, which would include learning vulgar and offensive words, but only "to be known and hated".Shakespeare, William, Henry IV, Part 2, Act IV, Scene 3.
Said the latter: 'Be sure I will slay thee.' 'Surely' said the former, 'He (God) doth accept of the sacrifice of those who are righteous.' are virtually the same as the Hebrew Bible narrative: Both the brothers were asked to offer up individual sacrifices to God; God accepted Abel's sacrifice and rejected Cain's; out of jealousy, Cain slew Abel – the first ever case of murder committed upon the Earth. In a Sunni Islamic version, Allah promises (permits) Adam to marry one of the twin pairs with one of the pairs of Qabil with the beautiful-looking Iqlimiya, while the twin pairs of his sister named Abel and Layudha are less attractive. When Adam was about to marry them (Abel with Iqlimiya and Qabil with Layudha, respectively) Qabil protested and disobeyed because Habil's sister is less attractive and his own sister is beautiful.
In October 1995, 2 Unlimited released their first compilation album, Hits Unlimited, prompting rumours that they were about to split up. The first single, "Do What's Good for Me", entered the top 5 in Finland, and the top 20 in the Netherlands and the UK. Despite their insistence that they were planning a world tour, in April 1996, shortly after the release of the single "Jump for Joy", both Slijngaard and Doth announced that 2 Unlimited was over. It later emerged that after having spent so much time together, they were no longer getting on as well as they once had, and there was disagreement about the future sound of band. They had asked for more creative input and they also felt that they were not getting a fair share of the huge amount of money being earned by the project.
Wondrous nature of God only good, The beast > hath root, the plant hath flesh and blood. The nimble plant can turn it to > and fro, The nummed beast can neither stir nor goe, The plant is leafless, > branchless, void of fruit, The beast is lustless, sexless, fireless, mute: > The plant with plants his hungry paunch doth feede, Th' admired beast is > sowen a slender seed. In his work Connubia Florum, Latino Carmine Demonstrata (1791), Dr. De la Croix writes of the vegetable lamb (translated): > For in his path he sees a monstrous birth, The Borametz arises from the > earth Upon a stalk is fixed a living brute, A rooted plant bears quadruped > for fruit, …It is an animal that sleeps by day And wakes at night, though > rooted in the ground, To feed on grass within its reach around.Ho, Judith.
Contrary to a popular misconception, William Harvey did not explicitly predict the existence of capillaries, but he clearly saw the need for some sort of connection between the arterial and venous systems. In 1653, he wrote, "...the blood doth enter into every member through the arteries, and does return by the veins, and that the veins are the vessels and ways by which the blood is returned to the heart itself; and that the blood in the members and extremities does pass from the arteries into the veins (either mediately by an anastomosis, or immediately through the porosities of the flesh, or both ways) as before it did in the heart and thorax out of the veins, into the arteries..." Marcello Malpighi was the first to observe directly and correctly describe capillaries, discovering them in a frog's lung 8 years later, in 1661.
A musician was employed who played a song called "Bankes's Game" during the act, and who entertained the audience between shows. Although the tune and lyrics have not been preserved, the song "The Praise of a Pretty Lass; or, The Young Man's Dissimulation", published sometime in the early 17th century, follows the same tune. The first verse goes: > Young men and maidens, to you Ile [I'll] declare, I love my love, and she > loveth me: Yet to no goddesse will I her compare, And yet she is pretty > indifferent faire: Will O, my love, O, there is none doth know How I doe > love thee. In addition, a ballad was published on 14 November 1595 by pamphleteer Edward White called "A ballad shewing the strange qualities of a yong nagg called Morocco", which is now lost.
The first edition of The Surgeon's Mate was published in 1617. Later editions contained treatise on :"for the better curing of Wounds made by Gunshot" :"of that most fearefull and contagious Disease called the Plague" :and "A Treatise of Gangrena... chiefly for the Amputation or Dismembering of any Member of the mortified part." Pages 160-176 to are devoted to "the scurvy called in Latine Scorbutum." :We have in our owne country here many excellent remedies generally knowne, as namely, Scurvy- grasse, Horse-Reddish roots, Nasturtia Aquatica, Wormwood, Sorrell, and many other good meanes... to the cure of those which live at home...they also helpe some Sea-men returned from farre who by the only natural disposition of the fresh aire and amendment of diet, nature herselfe in effect doth the Cure without other helps.
219 The mission turned out badly: Elizabeth was angered by their attack on the royal prerogative, and imprisoned them in the Fleet Prison. In Netterville's case, her attitude was probably influenced by Sidney's deep dislike of him. The Lord Deputy wrote to the Queen- Netterville is the younger son of a mean family and (his father) second justice of one of the benches, born to nothing and yet only by your Majesty's bounty liveth in better countenance than his father ever did or his elder brother doth; and notwithstanding that all he hath, he holdeth of your Highness in effect, he is (your sacred Majesty not offended with so bad a term as his lewdness deserveth) as seditious a varlet and as great an impugner of English Government as any this land beareth and calls for severe dealing with.Nolan, p.
1\. Come, ye thankful people, come, Raise the song of harvest home! All is safely gathered in, Ere the winter storms begin; God, our Maker, doth provide For our wants to be supplied; Come to God's own temple, come; Raise the song of harvest home! 2\. We ourselves are God's own field, Fruit unto his praise to yield; Wheat and tares together sown Unto joy or sorrow grown; First the blade and then the ear, Then the full corn shall appear; Grant, O harvest Lord, that we Wholesome grain and pure may be. 3\. For the Lord our God shall come, And shall take the harvest home; From His field shall in that day All offences purge away, Giving angels charge at last In the fire the tares to cast; But the fruitful ears to store In the garner evermore. 4\.
2\. All this world is God's own field, Fruit unto his praise to yield; Wheat and tares therein are sown Unto joy or sorrow grown; Ripening with a wondrous power Till the final harvest-hour: Grant, O Lord of life, that we Holy grain and pure may be. 3\. For we know that thou wilt come, And wilt take thy people home; From thy field wilt purge away All that doth offend, that day; And thine angels charge at last In the fire the tares to cast, But the fruitful ears to store In thy garner evermore. 4\. Come then, Lord of mercy, come, Bid us sing thy harvest-home: Let thy saints be gathered in Free from sorrow, free from sin; All upon the golden floor Praising thee for evermore: Come, with all thine angels come, Bid us sing thy harvest home.
Hebenon is the agent of death in Hamlet's father's murder; it sets in motion the events of the play. It is spelled hebona in the Quartos and hebenon in the Folios. This is the only mention of hebona or hebenon in any of Shakespeare’s plays. ::Upon my secure hour thy uncle stole, ::With juice of cursed hebenon in a vial, ::And in the porches of my ears did pour ::The leperous distilment; whose effect ::Holds such an enmity with blood of man ::That, swift as quicksilver, it courses through ::The natural gates and alleys of the body; ::And with a sudden vigour it doth posset ::And curd, like eager droppings into milk, ::The thin and wholesome blood; so did it mine; ::And a most instant tetter bark'd about, ::Most lazar-like, with vile and loathsome crust ::All my smooth body.
The origin of the institution of the local Spiritual Assembly originates from Baháʼu'lláh's book of laws, the Kitáb-i-Aqdas: :The Lord hath ordained that in every city a House of Justice be established wherein shall gather counsellors to the number of Baha, and should it exceed this number it doth not matter. They should consider themselves as entering the Court of the presence of God, the Exalted, the Most High, and as beholding Him Who is the Unseen. It behoveth them to be the trusted ones of the Merciful among men and to regard themselves as the guardians appointed of God for all that dwell on earth. It is incumbent upon them to take counsel together and to have regard for the interests of the servants of God, for His sake, even as they regard their own interests, and to choose that which is meet and seemly.
During their conversation, Mahmud sinks more and more into despair as he, in spite of reports of Turkish victories, realizes that he has lost the war. Alternating between the three dialogue parts is a chorus of enslaved Greek women, who furnish the drama with hope and aspirations for freedom's victory. Their participation is not directly connected to the insurrection of Greece, but rather expresses a universalized view of the futility of war. The action is seen from the Turkish point of view, which makes it possible for Shelley to focus both on Turkish defeat, via Mahmud, and Greek victory, through the chorus. The last chorus from the drama contains the much-quoted stanzas: :The world’s great age begins anew, ::The golden years return, :The earth doth like a snake renew ::Her winter weeds outworn: :Heaven smiles, and faiths and empires gleam, :Like wrecks of a dissolving dream.
The history of intersex surgery is intertwined with the development of the specialities of pediatric surgery, pediatric urology, and pediatric endocrinology, with our increasingly refined understanding of sexual differentiation, with the development of political advocacy groups united by a human qualified analysis, and in the last decade by doubts as to efficacy, and controversy over when and even whether some procedures should be performed. Prior to the medicalization of intersex, Canon and common law referred to a person's sex as male, female or hermaphrodite, with legal rights as male or female depending on the characteristics that appeared most dominant. The foundation of common law, the Institutes of the Lawes of England described how a hermaphrodite could inherit "either as male or female, according to that kind of sexe which doth prevaile."E Coke, The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, Institutes 8.a.
A poem was written about John Cropper by Edward Lear Dingle Bank He lived at Dingle Bank - he did; - He lived at Dingle Bank; And in his garden was one Quail, Four tulips and a Tank: And from his window he could see The otion and the River Dee. His house stood on a Cliff, - it did, Its aspic it was cool; And many thousand little boys Resorted to his school, Where if of progress they could boast He gave them heaps of buttered toast. But he grew rabid-wroth, he did, If they neglected books, And dragged them to adjacent Cliffs With beastly Button Hooks, And there with fatuous glee he threw Them down into the otion blue. And in the sea they sway, they did, - All playfully about, And some eventually became Sponges, or speckled trout: - But Liverpool doth all bewail Their Fate; - likewise his Garden Quail.
1704) in his Ardintoul MS History of the Mackenzies and which Alexander Mackenzie translates in English as: > "Although MacRath doth "fortunate" import, It's he deserves that name whose > brave effort, Eight hundred did put to flight, With his seven score at > Knock-Farrel". The Clan Munro Association (UK) translates the second line of the Gaelic verse into English differently as follows: > 'Did eight hundred men defeat and many kill, With his seven score on the > face of Pharrel hill'. A modern historian, C.I Fraser of Reelig also mentions William Munro and the alleged Battle of Drumchatt in 1501:. > William Munro of Foulis played a prominent part in public affairs in the > north, and was knighted by James IV. In 1501 in some official capacity, he > led a composite force of Munros, Dingwalls, and MacCullochs to attack Hector > Roy Mackenzie of Gairloch at Druim-a-Chait, near Strathpeffer.
Roach, Marilynne K. (2002), The Salem Witch Trials, A Day- By-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege, pg. 587, Cooper Square Press, New York, NY, [3] In June 1696 Elizabeth filed an appeal to contest her husband's will. She testified in court that in that "sad time of darkness before my said husband was executed it is evident somebody had contrived a will and brought it to him to sign, wherein his whole estate is disposed of". The will had already been probated and assets distributed and she stated that her step- children "will not suffer me to have one penny of the estate, neither upon the account of my husband's contract with me before marriage nor yet upon the account of the dower which, as I humbly conceive, doth belong or ought to belong to me by law, for they say that I am dead in the law".
In arranging Shakespeare's text, Vaughan Williams followed the word order, but cut words, phrases, and whole lines, and repeated at the end eleven words from the third and fourth lines, producing the following text. The initials mark the singers' solo passages; ensemble passages are shown in italics: How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank! Here will we sit and let the sounds of music Creep in our ears: soft stillness and the night Become the touches IB of sweet harmony. HN Look how the floor of heaven Is thick inlaid with patines of bright gold: FT There's not the smallest orb that thou behold'st But in his motion like an angel sings, WW Still quiring to the young-eyed cherubins; Such harmony is in immortal souls; PJ But whilst this muddy vesture of decay Doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it.
101-2: Michelle O'Callaghan, 'Collecting verse: "significant shape" and the paperbook in the early seventeenth century', Huntington Library Quarterly, 80:2 (2017), pp. 309-324, Available at University of Reading, Centaur. John Donne's poem alludes to Markham's mortal remains, her 'flesh' refined by her death like Chinese porcelain clay in an alembic to reveal the precious stones that comprise her soul: > But as the tide doth wash the slimy beach, > And leaves embroidered works upon the sand, > So is her flesh refined by death's cold hand. > As men of China, after an age's stay > Do take up porcelain, where they buried clay; > So at this grave, her limbeck, which refines > The diamonds, rubies, sapphires, pearls, and mines, > Of which this flesh was, her soul shall inspire > Flesh of such stuff, as God, when his last fire > Annuls this world, to recompense it, shall, > Make and name then, th'elixir of this all.
Jus Divinum Regiminis Ecclesiastici (English translation: The Divine Right of Church Government), which was promulgated by Presbyterian clergy in 1646, holds that historic ministerial succession is necessary for legitimate ministerial authority. It states that ministerial succession is conferred by elders through the laying on of hands, in accordance with . The Westminster Assembly held that "There is one general church visible" and that "every minister of the word is to be ordained by imposition of hands, and prayer, with fasting, by those preaching presbyters to whom it doth belong". The Church of North India, Church of Pakistan and Church of South India are members of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches and the clergy of these three united Protestant Churches possess lines of apostolic succession, according to the Anglican understanding of this doctrine, through the Church of India, Burma and Ceylon (CIBC), which finished merging with these three in the 1970s.
SDS argues the current text to the Slovene national anthem—the 7th stanza of France Prešeren's A Toast ("Blessed be all nations/Which yearn to see the light of day/When where'er the Sun doth wander/The lands' strife shall be cast away/And when free every kinsman will be/Not fiends, only neighbours in foreigners we'll see!")—is "too internationalistic, and insufficiently patriotic", and advocates other stanzas from Prešeren's poem be added as text to the official anthem. The party also advocates banning "all public expression of ideas through use of totalitarian symbols" and "all public displays of affection for totalitarian regimes". The party has denied accusations that it is merely attempting to outlaw the red star, which was the symbol of the Slovene Partisans during WWII, and is still often used in the Slovenian public sphere, including as a symbol/logo of political and parliamentary parties.
The Book of Mormon concludes with a cataclysmic war between the Nephites and Lamanites. The final prophet of the Book of Mormon, a Nephite named Moroni, laments that his people have participated in sexual violence, torture, and cannibalism: > And notwithstanding this great abomination of the Lamanites, it doth not > exceed that of our people in Moriantum. For behold, many of the daughters of > the Lamanites have they taken prisoners; and after depriving them of that > which was most dear and precious above all things, which is chastity and > virtue—And after they had done this thing, they did murder them in a most > cruel manner, torturing their bodies even unto death; and after they have > done this, they devour their flesh like unto wild beasts, because of the > hardness of their hearts; and they do it for a token of bravery.Moroni > 9:9–10.
There seems to be some confusion over whether personal name was derived from the place-name or vice versa. Another place name potentially associated with Cissa (pronounced 'Chissa') is the Iron Age hill fort Cissbury Ring, near Cissbury, which William Camden said "plainly bespeaks it the work of king Cissa".Camden. Britannia. p.312 - But Cisburie the name of the place doth plainely shew and testifie that it was the worke of Cissa: who beeing of the Saxons line the second king of this pety kingdom, after his father Ælle, accompanied with his brother Cimen and no small power of the Saxons, at this shore arrived and landed at Cimenshore, a place so called of the said Cimen, which now hath lost the name; but that it was neere unto Wittering.. The association of Cissbury with Cissa is a 16th-century antiquarian invention. Records show that Cissbury was known as Sissabury in 1610, Cesars Bury in 1663, Cissibury in 1732 and Sizebury in 1744.
Aye all: > No, to sleep, to dream, aye marry there it goes, > For in that dream of death, when we awake, > And borne before an everlasting Judge, > From whence no passenger ever returned, > The undiscovered country, at whose sight > The happy smile, and the accursed damn'd. > But for this, the joyful hope of this, > Who'd bear the scorns and flattery of the world, > Scorned by the right rich, the rich cursed of the poor? > The widow being oppressed, the orphan wrong'd, > The taste of hunger, or a tyrants reign, > And thousand more calamities besides, > To grunt and sweat under this weary life, > When that he may his full Quietus make, > With a bare bodkin, who would this endure, > But for a hope of something after death? > Which puzzles the brain, and doth confound the sense, > Which makes us rather bear those evils we have, > Than fly to others that we know not of.
He was created the 1st Earl of Yarmouth in 1679. Following the creation of the Royal Society in 1660, he was accepted as an Original Fellow on 20 May 1663. With another Fellow, Thomas Henshaw, he attempted to discover a formula for the fabled "red elixir", another name for the philosopher's stone which alchemists believed could transmute base metals into gold.Notes and Records of the Royal Society,Volume 51, Number 1, pp57-76 In a letter to Sir Thomas Browne he informed the Norwich physician-philosopher of his alchemical experiments - : I have at Oxnead seen this salt change black as ink, I must, at the lowest, have an excellent aurum potable, and if the signs we are to judge in Sendivogius’ description be true, I have the key which answers to what he says, that if a man has that which will gold as warm water doth ice, you have that which gold was first made in the earth.
The Virginia Resolution of 1798 also relied on the compact theory and asserted that the states have the right to determine whether actions of the federal government exceed constitutional limits. The Virginia Resolution introduced the idea that the states may "interpose" when the federal government acts unconstitutionally, in their opinion: > That this Assembly doth explicitly and peremptorily declare, that it views > the powers of the federal government as resulting from the compact to which > the states are parties, as limited by the plain sense and intention of the > instrument constituting that compact, as no further valid than they are > authorized by the grants enumerated in that compact; and that, in case of a > deliberate, palpable, and dangerous exercise of other powers, not granted by > the said compact, the states, who are parties thereto, have the right, and > are in duty bound, to interpose, for arresting the progress of the evil, and > for maintaining, within their respective limits, the authorities, rights and > liberties, appertaining to them.
Pevsner, p.790 It consists of a large slate chest tomb with a large slate back-plate behind and above, on which are shown in relief kneeling figures of Wrey and his wife. The monument displays much heraldry. The large slate slab on top of the chest tomb is inscribed within a ledger line thus: > Ye body of John Wrey Esquier who was buried ye 9th of June Ano Domini 1597 > Heere lieth the body of Blannch Wrey who was buried ye 16 of December 1595 On the left panel of the tripych is inscribed the following verse: > Loe here he lieth though dead yet living still, > His famous name resounding echo saye, > Whereby report of hym the ayre doth fyll > The lastinge fame & name of rightful Wreye, > Good to ye poore bribes never woulde he take, > Voyde of oppression all kind of waye, > He faithful frynds of enemyes did make, > Of quarels greate ceast lawe ech daye by daye.
For, when he saw the chestnuts buried in the hearth, he began to brush the ash aside but, afraid of the burning coals, he suddenly seized the foot of a sleeping puppy and stole it out.' The fable in Internet Archive. The same story involving a sleeping dog appeared in other emblem books, including the Choice of Emblemes by the English poet Geoffrey Whitney (1586), who draws a political lesson from it in common with the other emblematists: ::Which shewes, when as ambition fowle doth prick ::The hartes of kinges, then there is no remorce, ::But oftentimes, to aunswere theire desire, ::The subjectes feele both famine, sworde and fire. A version in which a cat figures is in Marcus Gheeraerts the Elder's illustrated book of fables, De warachtighe fabulen der dieren (True animal fables, Bruges, 1567), with Flemish verse provided by the foremost Netherlandic emblematist . A French version of the Fabulen was published in 1578 under the title Esbatement moral des animaux.
Biographer Mark Nicholls views the difference in signatures as a significant and puzzling lapse, if a "master forger" is presumed to be responsible for the document. He views the handwriting on the confession as "convincingly that of Winter [Wintour]", pointing out that it appears to be the work of an author, not an editor, and written as a draft for the King's Book. This is a view that generally, Alan Haynes agrees with: "no one has ever made a solid and sensible suggestion about why a government-employed forger (say Thomas Phelippes) would deliberately make such an error in a crucial state document". Another of Fraser's concerns is Waad's report to Salisbury on 21 November: "Thomas Winter doth find his hand so strong as after dinner he will settle himself to write that he hath verbally declared to your Lordship adding what he shall remember"—or rather, what he was told to remember.
This includes Socinians,Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Trinity > Unitarianism: "This Racovian Catechism identifies the God of Israel with the Father of Christ... Both the Trinity and the doctrine of two natures (divine and human) in Christ are argued to be both contradictory and unsupported by the Bible. It is argued that Christ is a man who did not pre-exist his miraculous conception in Mary, though he's denied to be 'merely' a man, but affirmed to be the unique Son of God, the Messiah, worthy of worship and a proper recipient of prayer." and early Unitarians such as John Biddle,J. Biddle A Twofold Catechism , chap. 4: "How was Jesus Christ born?" as well as "How many Lords of Christians are there, by way of distinction from the one God?" and "Doth the Scripture avouch Christ to be the Son of God because he was eternally begotten out of the Divine essence; or for other reasons agreeing to him only as a man?" and Nathaniel Lardner.
Jefferson and Madison's approach was not the only one taken in the eighteenth century. Jefferson's Statute of Religious Freedom was drafted in opposition to a bill, chiefly supported by Patrick Henry, which would permit any Virginian to belong to any denomination, but which would require him to belong to some denomination and pay taxes to support it. Similarly, the Constitution of Massachusetts originally provided that "no subject shall be hurt, molested, or restrained, in his person, liberty, or estate, for worshipping God in the manner and season most agreeable to the dictates of his own conscience... provided he doth not disturb the public peace, or obstruct others in their religious worship" (Article II), but also that: Since, in practice, this meant that the decision of who was taxable for a particular religion rested in the hands of the selectmen, usually Congregationalists, this system was open to abuse. It was abolished in 1833.
Then, a metal ring was fitted over this and secured with a pin. The ring was attached to a long, thin pole (the whipstaff proper) and this pole connected the tiller to the helmsman one or more decks above it through a pivot point, roll, or rowle, described as "that round piece of wood or iron wherein the whip doth go and is made turn about that it may carry over the whip from side to side with more ease." The helmsman himself still usually did not stand on the topmost deck, but rather viewed what lay ahead of the ship through a small port or hatchway in the deck above him called a companion. To move the ship to port, the forward-facing helmsman pulled the top of the staff to his left and pushed the pole down and to the right; to move it to starboard, he pulled the top to his right and pushed the pole down and to the left.
In 1955 she released her first (and only) solo album, Songs I Taught My Mother, which featured "silly, sinful, and satirical" songs by Sheldon Harnick, Vernon Duke, John La Touche, Cole Porter, Rodgers & Hart and Marc Blitzstein, among others.Songs I Taught My Mother allmusic.com, retrieved August 6, 2018 She appeared in Ben Bagley's revue The Littlest Revue (and on its cast album) in 1956, appearing alongside Joel Grey and Tammy Grimes, among others, and singing songs by Sheldon Harnick ("The Shape of Things"), Vernon Duke ("Summer is a-Comin' In"), and Charles Strouse and Lee Adams ("Spring Doth Let Her Colours Fly"), a parody of opera singer Helen Traubel's Las Vegas night club act, among others.The Littlest Revue Playbill, retrieved August 6, 2018 Rae later recorded Rodgers & Hart Revisited with Dorothy Loudon, Cy Young, and Arthur Siegel, singing "Everybody Loves You (When You Sleep)" and in several other duets and ensembles for Bagley's studio.
Lines to Mr. Isaac Holden by Philip Connell on his Drawing of the Prestwich Lunatic Asylum: > And Southward at due distance the huge hive, > Of busy Manchester is all alive, > Its towering chimnies, domes and steeples rise, > In strange confusion thro' the hazy skies; > There Broughton glimmers in the evening sun; > Here Cheetham Hill o'ertops the vapours dun; > There Kersal Moor the same bleak front doth shew, > That met the view Eight hundred years ago, > Where Clunian Monks there with their God did dwell, > Within the precincts of its holy cell. > In 1876 the Lancashire dialect poet and songwriter Edwin Waugh moved from his Manchester home to Kersal Moor for the "fresher air". Waugh's early life was spent in Rochdale and although he worked in Manchester he yearned for the moors he remembered from his youth. He wrote the following poem about Kersal Moor As his health declined, Waugh moved to the seaside town of New Brighton.
Sir Baldwin de Fulford (died 1476)Prince, John, (1643–1723) The Worthies of Devon, 1810 edition, London, p.394 (son), Sheriff of Devon in 1460, a Knight of the Sepulchre and Under-Admiral to John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter (died 1447), High Admiral of England. According to the Devonshire biographer John Prince (1643–1723): :"He was a great soldier and a traveller of so undaunted resolution that for the honor and liberty of a royal lady in a castle besieged by the infidels, he fought a combat with a Sarazen, for bulk and bigness an unequal match (as the representation of him cut in the wainscot in Fulford House doth plainly shew), whom yet he vanquish'd, and rescu'd the lady". In commemoration of this victory supporters to the arms of the family were granted (generally reserved as a privilege of the nobility alone) of two Saracens, which they still retain,Prince, 1810 edition, editor's note 5, p.
Timothy Ware, The Orthodox Church (Penguin Books, 1964, ), p. 259 Saint Basil the Great (379 CE) writes in his Third Kneeling Prayer at Pentecost: "O Christ our God ... (who) on this all-perfect and saving Feast, art graciously pleased to accept propitiatory prayers for those who are imprisoned in hades, promising unto us who are held in bondage great hope of release from the vilenes that doth hinder us and did hinder them, ... send down Thy consolation ... and establish their souls in the mansions of the Just; and graciously vouchsafe unto them peace and pardon; for not the dead shall praise thee, O Lord, neither shall they who are in Hell make bold to offer unto thee confession. But we who are living will bless thee, and will pray, and offer unto thee propitiatory prayers and sacrifices for their souls."Isabel F. Hapgood, Service Book of the Holy Orthodox-Catholic Apostolic Church (Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese, Englewood, New Jersey, 1975, 5th edition), p. 255.
Nevertheless, a decree was issued in 1632 for the "disafforestation of the Chace of Malvern, and for freeing the lands within the bounds, limits, and jurisdictions thereof, of and from the game of deer there and the forest laws". By this decree (to obviate all disputes) one-third part only was to be severed and divided by commissioners, but the other two parts "shall remain and continue unto and amongst the commoners, and be held by them according to their several rights and interests, discharged and freed from his Majesty's game of deer there, and of and from the forest laws, and the liberties and franchises of Forest and Chace, in such sort as by the said decree it doth and may appear".Lees, 1877 Further disputes with landowners resulted in clarifications that any land that was disafforested had to be in proportion to the quality of the land as a whole, so that the common was not the most meagre land.
The friction between Stratford's First and Second Churches prompted the Connecticut General Court in 1672 to grant permission to Joseph Judson and three others to establish a new plantation about 50 miles north of Stratford at Pomperaug. > This Court grants Mr. Samll Sherman, Lnt Wm. Curtice, Ens: Joseph Judson and > John Minor themselues and associates liberty to errect a plantation at > Pomperoage, prouided it doth not prejudice any former grant to any other > plantation or perticuler person; prouided any other honest inhabitants of > Stratford haue liberty to joyne with them in setleing there, and that they > entertein so many inhabitants as the place will conueniently interteine, and > that they setle there within the space of three yeares. Judson and other town founders created a settlers' agreement in 1672 titled the "Fundamental Articles agreed upon in order to ye settlement of a plantation at Pomparague." The Fundamental Articles, ratified in 1673 by 17 original settlers, contained six sections and six amendments.
An early printed recipe for haggis appears in 1615 in The English Huswife by Gervase Markham. It contains a section entitled "Skill in Oate meale": "The use and vertues of these two severall kinds of Oate-meales in maintaining the Family, they are so many (according to the many customes of many Nations) that it is almost impossible to recken all"; and then proceeds to give a description of "oat- meale mixed with blood, and the Liver of either Sheepe, Calfe or Swine, maketh that pudding which is called the Haggas or Haggus, of whose goodnesse it is in vaine to boast, because there is hardly to be found a man that doth not affect them." (Gervase Markham, The English Huswife) Food writer Alan Davidson suggests that the ancient Romans were the first known to have made products of the haggis type. Haggis was "born of necessity, as a way to utilize the least expensive cuts of meat and the innards as well".
The Heidelberg Catechism interprets the title "Christ" in terms of the threefold office, in Lord's Day 12, Question and Answer 31: Q. Why is he called "Christ," meaning "anointed"? A. Because he has been ordained by God the Father ::and has been anointed with the Holy Spirit to be :our chief prophet and teacher ::who perfectly reveals to us ::the secret counsel and will of God for our deliverance; :our only high priest ::who has set us free by the one sacrifice of his body, ::and who continually pleads our cause with the Father; :and our eternal king ::who governs us by his Word and Spirit, ::and who guards us and keeps us ::in the freedom he has won for us. The Westminster Shorter Catechism explains the role of Christ as redeemer in terms of the threefold office: Q. 23: What offices doth Christ execute as our Redeemer? :Christ, as our Redeemer, executeth the offices of a prophet, of a priest, and of a king, both in his estate of humiliation and exaltation.
On 9 February 1646 he was pardoned and fined by Parliament for his support of the Royalists, as is recorded in the Journals of the House of Commons as follows:Journals of the House of Commons, Volume 5, 9 February 1646, p.80 :"Resolved, etc, That the House doth accept of the fine of one hundred thirty- four pounds nine shillings sixpence, of John Northover, of Aller in the County of Sommersett, Gentleman, for his delinquency: his offence is, that he voluntarily contributed to the maintenance of the forces raised against the Parliament: his estate, for eighty years to come, per annum, forty pounds; for three lives, per annum, four pounds nine shillings threepence; for life, per annum, three pounds fourteen shillings: for which his fine, at a sixth, is as aforefaid. An ordinance for granting a pardon unto John Northover, of Aller in the county of Somersett, Gentleman, for his delinquency, and for the discharge of the sequestration of his estate, was this day read; and, upon the question, passed; and ordered to be sent to the Lords for their concurrence".
Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood was based on inference, not direct observation, and was incompatible with the prevailing paradigm at the time. That paradigm held, among other things, that the blood could flow from one side of the heart to the other. Harvey knew that he was facing an uphill battle: > "But what remains to be said about the quantity and source of the blood > which thus passes, is of so novel and unheard-of character that I not only > fear injury to myself from the envy of a few, but I tremble lest I have > mankind at large for my enemies, so much doth want and custom, that become > as another nature, and doctrine once sown and that hath struck deep root, > and respect for antiquity, influence all men : still the die is cast, and my > trust is in my love of truth, and the candour that inheres in cultivated > minds." Harvey's premonitions that his discovery will be met with scepticism, derision, and abuse, were entirely justified.
Philip, Abby. "A permanent reminder of Wall Street’s hidden slave-trading past is coming soon", Washington Post, April 15, 2015, retrieved February 10, 2017. An act of the New York General Assembly, passed in 1730, provided that: > Forasmuch as the number of slaves in the cities of New York and Albany, as > also within the several counties, towns and manors within this colony, doth > daily increase, and that they have oftentimes been guilty of confederating > together in running away, and of other ill and dangerous practices, be it > therefore unlawful for above three slaves to meet together at any time, nor > at any other place, than when it shall happen they meet in some servile > employment for their masters' or mistresses' profit, and by their masters' > or mistresses' consent, upon penalty of being whipped upon the naked back, > at the discretion of any one justice of the peace, not exceeding forty > lashes for each offense. Manors and towns could appoint a common whipper at no more than three shillings per person.
While his vindication from the Massachusetts court allowed Wheelwright to mend his relationships with his brethren in New England, he still felt stung by the accusations of the authors of the Short Story, and of Samuel Rutherford in his 1648 work, A Survey of the Spiritual Antichrist ... , and he was intent in clearing his name with people back in England. In 1658 Edward Cole of London published Wheelwright's A Brief and Plain Apology, whose lengthy subtitle read "Wherein he doth vindicate himself, From al those Errors, Heresies, and Flagitious Crimes, layed to his charge by Mr. Thomas Weld, in his short story, And further Fastened upon him by Mr. Samuel Rutherford in his Survey of Antinomianisme". Wheelwright's purpose in publishing this work was so that his innocence and the unfairness of his trial be recognized, and that "his views on the process by which the saved acquired grace be accepted as correct, even orthodox". He chose to emphasize seven theological issues which he divided into three "propositions," and four "theses".
In some sonnets addressed to the youth, such as Sonnet 52, the erotic punning is particularly intense: "So is the time that keeps you as my chest, / Or as the wardrobe which the robe doth hide, / To make some special instant special blest, / By new unfolding his imprisoned pride." In Elizabethan bawdy, 'pride' is a euphemism for penis, especially an erect one.Partridge, Eric Shakespeare’s Bawdy, Routledge p217 Others have countered that these passages could be referring to intense platonic friendship, rather than sexual love. In the preface to his 1961 Pelican edition (at which time, in Britain, proven male homosexuality still carried a prison sentence, dismissal from the professions and huge public stigma), Douglas Bush writes, > Since modern readers are unused to such ardor in masculine friendship and > are likely to leap at the notion of homosexuality (a notion sufficiently > refuted by the sonnets themselves), we may remember that such an ideal, > often exalted above the love of women, could exist in real life, from > Montaigne to Sir Thomas Browne, and was conspicuous in Renaissance > literature.
Co., Baltimore, 1979. > This INDENTURE Witnesseth that James Best a Labourer doth Voluntarily put > himself Servant to Captain Stephen Jones Master of the Snow Sally to serve > the said Stephen Jones and his Assigns, for and during the full Space, Time > and Term of three Years from the first Day of the said James’ arrival in > Philadelphia in AMERICA, during which Time or Term the said Master or his > Assigns shall and will find and supply the said James with sufficient Meat, > Drink, Apparel, Lodging and all other necessaries befitting such a Servant, > and at the end and expiration of said Term, the said James to be made Free, > and receive according to the Custom of the Country. Provided nevertheless, > and these Presents are on this Condition, that if the said James shall pay > the said Stephen Jones or his Assigns 15 Pounds British in twenty one Days > after his arrival he shall be Free, and the above Indenture and every Clause > therein, absolutely Void and of no Effect.
According to Clarke, Boucher "took up all sorts of sad, grim, and pleasurable subjects, from the hanging of some wretch at Stafford Gaol, to a dog, or cock fight at Sedgley, or Tipton". On the death of Dr. Luke Booker, Vicar of Dudley (which happened away from Dudley): > St. Luke is dead—a Poet and Divine— I hope his spirit doth in glory shine. > To save expense, and the roads being ugly, Or the Doctor would have come to > Dudley. Written after the old St. Thomas’s Church, Dudley was demolished (and some furnishings sent to nearby Gornal): > The seats and the windows, ah, and the clock too, Were sent on to Gornal, to > their Gornal crew; For the sand men and asses, for to go to church, And the > people of Dudley were left in the lurch. Opening of "Lines On Dudley Market", 1827: > At Dudley Market, now I tell, Most kind of articles they sell; The women > take the greatest care To buy up crocks and earthenware, Milkpans, and > colliers’ tots, Coloured cups and chamber-pots.
Ward was refuted "heartlessly" by Willcock and Walker in their 1936 critical edition.Whigham and Rebhorn, p. 20. Ward published several articles in scholarly journals announcing his discovery that Oxford was the author of works attributed to George Gascoigne, and in 1926 he published a reprint edition of Gascoigne's A Hundreth Sundrie Flowres, which included an introduction advancing the theory that it was in fact compiled and edited by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Oxford supposedly also contributed some poems and revealed his authorship using an acrostic that spelled out "Edward de Vere" in the poem "The absent lover (in ciphers) disciphering his name, doth crave some spedie relief as followeth".Ward, B. M. A Hundreth Sundrie Flowres From the Original Edition of 1573, (1926) London: F. Etchells and H. Macdonald, pp. vii-xxxix. Ward claimed that the motto on the title page, which was signed to 22 of the 100 poems, was Oxford's; that the signature Si Fortunatus Infoelix was the posy of Christopher Hatton, a commoner, and thereby identified Hatton's contributions; and that the initials F.I. in The Poesies of George Gascoigne (1575) stood for the principal letters in Hatton's supposed motto.
Considering the weather and difficulties of the road into Scotland, on 8 February 1559 Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk and Lord Grey de Wilton wrote to the Lords of Congregation from Newcastle; "we find greate difficultie of the cariadge of the same by land at this tyme of the yere, as well by reason of the deepe and foule wayes between Barwick and Lythe, as also that for such a number of cariadges and draught horses as the same doth require can not be had in time, and therefore we suppose the same must of necessity be transported by sea, and the number of footmen also appointed for this journey to be set on land as near unto Lythe as may be convenientlie. And in that case, our horsemen to enter by land as soon as we have intelligence of the landing of our footmen."Haynes, Collection of State Papers (London, 1740), pp. 237-8: Source, TNA SP52/2/42. In the event, an army of around 6,000 English soldiers, under Lord Grey de Wilton marched from Berwick, arriving in early April to join up with the Scottish Lords.
One collection of Quranic descriptions of hell include "rather specific indications of the tortures of the Fire": flames that crackle and roar; fierce, boiling waters scorching wind, and black smoke, roaring and boiling as if it would burst with rage. Its wretched inhabitants sigh and wail, their scorched skins are constantly exchanged for new ones so that they can taste the torment anew, drink festering water and though death appears on all sides they cannot die. They are linked together in chains of 70 cubits, wearing pitch for clothing and fire on their faces, have boiling water that will be poured over their heads, melting their insides as well as their skins, and hooks of iron to drag them back should they try to escape, their remorseful admissions of wrongdoing and pleading for forgiveness are in vain. The description of Jahannam as a place of blazing fire appears in almost every verse in the Quran describing hell. Jahannam is described as being located below heaven,verse 7:50 states "The companions of the Fire will call to the Companions of the Garden: ‘Pour down to us water or anything that God doth provide’".
Disc 1 # "Soul's Journey" – 6:51 ["Novus Pt. 1" – 26:34] # "Ascent" – 5:12 # "Tears for Terra" – 4:26 # "Exultate" – 6:06 # "My Heart Doth Soar" – 3:59 # "The Flying Bach" – 6:06 ["Novus Pt. 2" – 27:40] # "Trust" – 4:56 # "Bridging Dimensions" – 3:15 # "Through the Stargate" – 4:45 # "Magnificat" – 3:58 # "Cosmic Carousel" – 4:40 Disc 2 # "Novus Magnificat Live: Baktun 1 (December 21, 2012)" – 12:28 # "Novus Magnificat Live: Spring Equinox (December 21, 2012)" – 12:07 # "Novus Magnificat Live: Full Moon Eclipse (March 19, 2011)" – 14:24 # "Novus Magnificat Live: Baktun 2 (June 26, 2010)" – 12:35 # "Space Bass: Live Baktun 3 (December 21, 2012)" – 5:44 Two of these movements had already been named in 1987 for the best-of compilation Light of This World. Four more were named (some with a different title) as free MP3 samples provided on Demby's website since at least 2001:Demby's Novus page from 2001 to 2007 via Archive.org had this partial track list. The original six MP3 files are still the same on the 2009 website's complete track list (including keeping their old filenames).
Jacob blessing Manasseh and Ephraim. > Let the blessing come upon the head of Joseph ... [upon] him that was > separated from his brethren. His glory is like the firstling of his bullock, > and his horns are like the horns of the wild-ox: with them he shall push the > people together to the ends of the earth: and they are the ten thousands of > Ephraim, and they are the thousands of Manasseh ... (Deut 33:16-17; see D&C; > 110:9) I am a father to Israel, and Ephraim is my firstborn. Hear the word > of the Lord, O ye nations, and declare it in the isles afar off, and say, He > that scattered Israel will gather him, as a shepherd doth his flock ... (Jer > 31:9-10) Joseph is a father to Ephraim and to all Israel in these last days > ... (latter-day prophet Brigham Young, 9 Apr 1837) According to LDS doctrine, the Twelve Tribes of Israel descended from the twelve sons of the patriarch Jacob (who was later named Israel) and his two wives, Leah and Rachel, and two concubines, Zilpah and Bilhah.
Compare the Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter XVIII. The Westminster Confession of Faith affirmsWestminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 18, paragraph 3 that assurance is attainable though the wait for it may be long: > ...infallible assurance doth not so belong to the essence of faith but that > a true believer may wait long and conflict with many difficulties before he > be partaker of it: yet, being enabled by the Spirit to know the things which > are freely given him of God, he may, without extraordinary revelation, in > the right use of ordinary means, attain thereunto. And therefore it is the > duty of everyone to give all diligence to make his calling and election > sure; that thereby his heart may be enlarged in peace and joy in the Holy > Ghost, in love and thankfulness to God, and in strength and cheerfulness in > the duties of obedience, the proper fruits of this assurance... Additionally, the Augustinian doctrines of grace regarding predestination are taught in the Reformed churches primarily to assure believers of their salvation since the Calvinist doctrines emphasize that salvation is entirely a sovereign gift of God apart from the recipient's choice, deeds, or feelings (compare perseverance of the saints).
Plaque After the Reformation and the Act of Supremacy 1558, in 1600, Thomas Gunter, a local Roman Catholic, built the house. A secret chapel was constructed in the attic. On 12 April 1678, John Arnold (the MP for Monmouthshire), a fanatical anti-Catholic, told the House of Commons, ‘that he had seen a public chapel near the house of Mr Thomas Gunter, a papist convict, in Abergavenny, adorned with the mark of the Jesuits on the outside, and is informed that Mass is said there by Captain Evans, a reported Jesuit, and by the aforesaid David Lewis in that very great numbers resort to the said chapel and very often at Church time, and he hath credibly heard that hundreds have gone out of the said chapel when not forty have gone out of the said church, that the said chapel is situate in a public street of the said town, and doth front the street.'Gunter Mansion from Welsh Georgian Trust, retrieved 20 May 2016 The younger Thomas Gunter had been notably indiscreet about his harbouring of Catholic priests, Kenyon, J.P. The Popish Plot Phoenix Press reissue 2000 p.

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