English Works: Toxophilus, Report of the Affaires and State of Germany, The Scholemaster |
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Page 26
... judged by the table , and than farewell the honest man hys parte , for he is borne downe on euerye syde . Nowe sir , besyde all these thinges they haue certayne termes , as a man woulde saye , appropriate to theyr playing : wherby they ...
... judged by the table , and than farewell the honest man hys parte , for he is borne downe on euerye syde . Nowe sir , besyde all these thinges they haue certayne termes , as a man woulde saye , appropriate to theyr playing : wherby they ...
Page 206
... judgement . For , if a yong ientleman , be demeure and still of nature , they say , he is simple and lacketh witte : if he be bashefull , and will soone blushe , they call him a babishe Xen . in I. Cyr . Pad . The Grace in Courte . and ...
... judgement . For , if a yong ientleman , be demeure and still of nature , they say , he is simple and lacketh witte : if he be bashefull , and will soone blushe , they call him a babishe Xen . in I. Cyr . Pad . The Grace in Courte . and ...
Page 210
... judgement also of them , which be the discretest men , and I know , Iulianus best learned , on their own side . Apostata did so , but I neuer hard or red , that any auncyent father of the primitiue chirch , either Iulia . Apo- stat ...
... judgement also of them , which be the discretest men , and I know , Iulianus best learned , on their own side . Apostata did so , but I neuer hard or red , that any auncyent father of the primitiue chirch , either Iulia . Apo- stat ...
Page 270
... judgement . Concernyng Imitation , many learned men haue written , with moch diuersitie for the matter , and therfore with great contrarietie and some stomacke amongest them selues . I haue read as many as I could get diligentlie , and ...
... judgement . Concernyng Imitation , many learned men haue written , with moch diuersitie for the matter , and therfore with great contrarietie and some stomacke amongest them selues . I haue read as many as I could get diligentlie , and ...
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agayne agaynst alwayes archers Aristotle authoritie awaye betwixt beyng booke bowe brought vp bycause Cæsar caried Cicero dayes deede Demosthenes diligence diuerse doth doyng Duke Maurice Emperour England euen euery euerye Euripides eyther farre fether fitte folow frend Greke hath haue Homer honest hym selfe Ientlemen Iohn ioyned Isocrates Italie iudge iudgement kepe kyng Latin tong learning learnyng leaue litle loue lyke lytle maner marke matter maye moch moost mynde nedes neuer noble nothyng onelie ouer pastime perfite Plato Plautus poynte prayse Prince priuate proue Quintilian sayd saye sayth Scholemaster scholer selues serue shafte shal shewe shoote shootynge shoting shulde soch Sophocles strynge sure surelie taulke therfore theyr thinges thynges togither Toxophile trewe Tullie tyme vertue verye vnder vnto vpon vsed warre waye whan whyche wise witte wolde wordes wyll wynde wyth wythall Xenophon ynough yong youth
Popular passages
Page 202 - I bear them, so without measure misordered, that I think myself in hell, till time come that I must go to Mr.
Page 231 - This is good stuffe, for wise men to laughe at, or honest men to take pleasure at. Yet I know, when Gods Bible was banished the Court, and Morte Arthure receiued into the Princes chamber.
Page 188 - For this I know, not only by reading of books in my study, but also by experience of life, abroad in the world, that those which be commonly the wisest, the best learned, and best men also, when they be old, were never commonly the quickest of wit when they were young.
Page 230 - Ten sermons at Paul's Cross do not so much good for moving men to true doctrine, as one of those books do harm with enticing men to ill living. Yea, I say farther, those books tend not so much to corrupt honest living, as they do to subvert true religion.
Page 201 - I speake, kepe silence, sit, stand, or go, eate, drinke, be merie, or sad, be sowyng, plaiyng, dauncing, or doing anie thing els, I must do it, as it were, in soch weight, mesure, and number, even so perfitelie, as God made the world, or else I am so sharplie taunted, so cruellie threatened, yea presentlie some...
Page 121 - A REPORT AND DISCOURSE, written by Roger Ascham, of the affaires and state of Germany and the Emperour Charles, his court, duryng certaine yeares while the sayd Roger was there.
Page 205 - ... they have commonly the rein of all license in their own hand, and specially such as do live in the court. And that which is most to be marveled at, commonly the wisest and also best men be found the fondest fathers in this behalf.
Page 192 - And though I, in all this discourse, seem plainly to prefer hard and rough wits before quick and light wits both for learning and manners, yet...
Page 265 - Ye know not what hurt ye do to learning that care not for words, but for matter, and so make a divorce betwixt the tongue and the heart.
Page xiv - I communed with a man whiche reasoned the englyshe tongue to be enryched and~encreased therby, sayinge : Who wyll not prayse that feaste, where a man shall drinke at a diner, bothe wyne, ale and beere ? Truely quod I, they be all good, euery one taken by hym selfe alone, but if you putte...