The Schoolmaster (1570)Folger Shakespeare Library, 1967 - 167 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 64
Pagina 13
... youth , be never or hardly plucked away in age . Moreover , there is no one thing that hath more either dulled the wits or taken away the will of children from learning than the care they have to satisfy their masters in making of ...
... youth , be never or hardly plucked away in age . Moreover , there is no one thing that hath more either dulled the wits or taken away the will of children from learning than the care they have to satisfy their masters in making of ...
Pagina 51
... youth . But he answered them very wisely . " Indeed , " saith he , " in youth I was as you are now , and I had twelve fellows like unto myself , but not one of them came to a good end . And therefore follow not my example in youth , but ...
... youth . But he answered them very wisely . " Indeed , " saith he , " in youth I was as you are now , and I had twelve fellows like unto myself , but not one of them came to a good end . And therefore follow not my example in youth , but ...
Pagina 59
... youth , meaning thereby that from seven year old to seventeen love is the best allurement to learning , from seven- teen to seven - and - twenty that wise men should ... youth surely stayed by good order in that 59 The Bringing - up of Youth.
... youth , meaning thereby that from seven year old to seventeen love is the best allurement to learning , from seven- teen to seven - and - twenty that wise men should ... youth surely stayed by good order in that 59 The Bringing - up of Youth.
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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