Ancient Ireland: Her Milesian Chiefs, Her Kings and Princes. Her Great Men. Her Struggles for Liberty. Her Apostle St. Patrick. Her ReligionJ. Mullany, 1855 - 324 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 27
Pagina 38
... Gaul is divided . " However , this passive form of the verb is translated as the Latin present passive . There may be found some variation from this rule which the reader will himself be able to understand . The passive voice of Irish ...
... Gaul is divided . " However , this passive form of the verb is translated as the Latin present passive . There may be found some variation from this rule which the reader will himself be able to understand . The passive voice of Irish ...
Pagina 80
... Gauls , " to dis- tinguish them from the " Gael , " Irish . The poet thought the unoffend- ing old English families , who were certainly kind , good , charitable , and devout , would be left unmolested by their countrymen . All the ...
... Gauls , " to dis- tinguish them from the " Gael , " Irish . The poet thought the unoffend- ing old English families , who were certainly kind , good , charitable , and devout , would be left unmolested by their countrymen . All the ...
Pagina 49
... Gaul . We find in the first book of " Cæsar's Gallic War , " that the Belgæ inhabited all the northern parts of Gaul , as far as the mouth of the Seine , which formed a part of the boundary between the Celta and Belgæ . The reader will ...
... Gaul . We find in the first book of " Cæsar's Gallic War , " that the Belgæ inhabited all the northern parts of Gaul , as far as the mouth of the Seine , which formed a part of the boundary between the Celta and Belgæ . The reader will ...
Pagina 54
... Gaul , on the shores of the British ocean . Their name is derived from the Celtic - Mor , ' which signifies the sea , denoting a maritime people . They were called extremi hominum by the Romans , because situated on the extremities of Gaul ...
... Gaul , on the shores of the British ocean . Their name is derived from the Celtic - Mor , ' which signifies the sea , denoting a maritime people . They were called extremi hominum by the Romans , because situated on the extremities of Gaul ...
Pagina 55
... Gaul ) , a town near the river Fene . " " Morini a voce Celtica Mor , quæ mare significat ; qui , Maritimi ( Hardianus ) , from the Celtic word , Mor , which signifies sea ( that is , a maritime people ) , a people of Belgic Gaul , near ...
... Gaul ) , a town near the river Fene . " " Morini a voce Celtica Mor , quæ mare significat ; qui , Maritimi ( Hardianus ) , from the Celtic word , Mor , which signifies sea ( that is , a maritime people ) , a people of Belgic Gaul , near ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Ancient Ireland: Her Milesian Chiefs, Her Kings and Princes. Her Great Men ... Martin A. O'Brennan Visualizzazione completa - 1855 |
Ancient Ireland: Her Milesian Chiefs, Her Kings and Princes Her Great Men ... Martin an O'Brennan Anteprima non disponibile - 2015 |
Ancient Ireland: Her Milesian Chiefs, Her Kings and Princes Her Great Men ... Martin A. O'Brennan Anteprima non disponibile - 2018 |
Parole e frasi comuni
Æneid Ailbe alluded amongst ancestor ancient Apostle Archbishop Ardfert Armorica Banba battle Belgic Gaul Bishop Brennan Cæsar called Cashel Castle Castlerea Catholic Celtic century chief Christ Christian Church Clonfert Connaught Danaans descended Dirge Dublin Earl Eire English Erin fact faith father Fiech Gadelas Gadelians Gael Galway Gaul Greek Heber Hence Heremon holy honour hymn illustrious Ireland Irish language island James John Keash Keating Kerry Kilkenny king land Lanigan Latin learned Leinster letter Lord Mac Carthy Mac Donnell Mayo Meath Milesians Milesius monarch Morini Munster nation native Nemedians Niul noble O'Brennan O'Brien O'Connell O'Connor O'Flaherty O'Neill Ogygia Ormond passage Patrick Picts poem poet prelate priests prince Queen's County reader reign religion Rome Roscommon saint scholar Scota Scythians sons STANZA tower town translation tribe Tuam Ulster verse word writers written
Brani popolari
Pagina 49 - Ah ! why will Kings forget that they are Men ? And Men that they are brethren ? Why delight In human sacrifice ? Why burst the ties Of Nature, that should knit their souls together In one soft bond of amity and love...
Pagina 9 - Come ye, therefore, let us go down, and there confound their tongue, that they may not understand one another's speech.
Pagina 184 - ... although there should none of them fall by the sword nor be slain by the soldier : yet thus being kept from manurance and their cattle from running abroad, by this hard restraint they would quickly consume themselves, and devour one another.
Pagina 76 - God. I wish that all honest hearts may give the glory of this to God alone, to whom indeed the praise of this mercy belongs.
Pagina 79 - ... neither the Israelites were more cruelly persecuted by Pharaoh, nor the innocent infants by Herod, nor the Christians by Nero, or any of the other pagan tyrants, than were the Roman catholics of Ireland, at that fatal juncture...
Pagina xxiv - It is really astonishing of what various and comprehensive powers this neglected language is possessed. In the pathetic, it breathes the most beautiful and afFecting simplicity; and in the bolder species of composition, it is distinguished by a force of expression, a sublime dignity, and rapid energy, which it is scarcely possible for any translation fully to convey; as it sometimes fills the mind with ideas altogether new, and which, perhaps, no modern language is entirely prepared to express. One...
Pagina 161 - Hic mihi quisquam mansuetudinem et misericordiam nominat? lampridem equidem nos vera vocabula rerum amisimus: quia bona aliena largiri liberalitas, malarum rerum audacia fortitudo vocatur, eo res publica in extremo sita est.
Pagina 24 - The Irish is a language completely sweet, In aid of which no foreign e'er did meet ; A copious, free, keen and extending voice, And mellifluent, brief; for mirth most choice. Although the Hebrew language be the first, And that, for learning, Latin be the best, Yet still, from them, the Irish ne'er was found One word to borrow, to make its proper sound.
Pagina 2 - Unless the fixed decrees of fate give way, The Scots shall govern and the sceptre sway, Where'er this stone they find, and its dread sound obey.
Pagina 40 - Multum in longitudinem et latitudinem patet. Hominibus inter se nulli fines ; neque enim agrum exercent : nee domus illis ulla, aut tectum, aut sedes est , armenta et pecora semper pascentibus , et per incultas solitudines errare solitis. Uxores liberosque secum in plaustris vehunt , quibus , coriis imbrium hiemisque causa tectis, pro domibus utuntur.