The Schoolmaster (1570)Folger Shakespeare Library, 1967 - 167 pagine |
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Pagina xxxv
... English schools . Throughout most of the two following centuries imitation is recommended as the chief means of im- proving one's Latin , and even one's vernacular , style ; such influential writers of educational treatises as Henry ...
... English schools . Throughout most of the two following centuries imitation is recommended as the chief means of im- proving one's Latin , and even one's vernacular , style ; such influential writers of educational treatises as Henry ...
Pagina 80
... English and out of English into Latin again . About St. Laurence ' tide after , to prove how he profited , I did choose out Torquatus ' talk de amicitia in the latter end of the first book De finibus 8 9 because that place was 7 " Fable ...
... English and out of English into Latin again . About St. Laurence ' tide after , to prove how he profited , I did choose out Torquatus ' talk de amicitia in the latter end of the first book De finibus 8 9 because that place was 7 " Fable ...
Pagina 146
... English tongue , having in use chiefly words of one syllable which commonly be long , doth not well receive the nature of carmen heroicum , because dactylus , the aptest foot for that verse , containing one long and two short , is ...
... English tongue , having in use chiefly words of one syllable which commonly be long , doth not well receive the nature of carmen heroicum , because dactylus , the aptest foot for that verse , containing one long and two short , is ...
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amongst Aristotle Ascham authors beating bringing-up Cambridge Cheke child Cicero common commonly court Cyaxares Cyropaedia Demosthenes diligently doctrine doth double translation eloquence England English epistles epitome Euripides example excellent exercise fair father fault fear follow gladly God's goodly grammar Greek hard wits Harvard University hath Homer honest imitation Institutio oratoria Isocrates Italian Italy judgment kind labor Latin tongue learning living Livy Loeb Classical Library London manners matter men's mind misliking misorder nature never noble opinion orations overmuch paraphrasis perfect plain plainly Plato Plautus pleasure praise prince profit quick Quintilian religion rhyming rude saith Sallust schoolmaster sentences Sir John Cheke Socrates Sophocles speak Sturmius surely talk teaching Terence things Thucydides trans treatise true Tully Tully's unto utterance Varro verse Virgil wisdom wise wisest withal words worthy writing Xenophon young gentlemen youth καὶ