Anecdotes ou mémoires secrets sur la constitution Unigenitus, Volume 3 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 18
Page 436
... form , but their moral and religious suggestions and impli cations are allied with such a sunny sweetness of literary manner that their direct hortatory intention is lost sight of in the human interest and social charm of the stories ...
... form , but their moral and religious suggestions and impli cations are allied with such a sunny sweetness of literary manner that their direct hortatory intention is lost sight of in the human interest and social charm of the stories ...
Page 4
... are sure we under- stand them . I have felt that it would be an affectation to discard the Italianized Borgia for the true form of his family name , Borja . I. THE COURTIER " If you can talk with crowds 4 IN GOD'S ARMY.
... are sure we under- stand them . I have felt that it would be an affectation to discard the Italianized Borgia for the true form of his family name , Borja . I. THE COURTIER " If you can talk with crowds 4 IN GOD'S ARMY.
Page 10
... form an auto - sacramental , or musical dialogue in honour of the Blessed Sacrament , sung at the Poor Clares ' at Gandia . Flemish influence is said to be here dimin- ished ; the fugues are full of spirit , and the counter- point ...
... form an auto - sacramental , or musical dialogue in honour of the Blessed Sacrament , sung at the Poor Clares ' at Gandia . Flemish influence is said to be here dimin- ished ; the fugues are full of spirit , and the counter- point ...
Page 21
... form , in the Saint - to - be . Borgia's household now consisted of himself , his wife and her sister , his eight children and their governess . His expenses were , then , bound to be enormous ; his revenues were not large , his salary ...
... form , in the Saint - to - be . Borgia's household now consisted of himself , his wife and her sister , his eight children and their governess . His expenses were , then , bound to be enormous ; his revenues were not large , his salary ...
Page 24
... form a fleet . ( And , as background , what intrigues and jealousies ! " Everyone wanted to be Admiral ... Noble fights with noble , bishop with bishop ; no sooner has the Viceroy healed a quarrel here , than it breaks out there . ) The ...
... form a fleet . ( And , as background , what intrigues and jealousies ! " Everyone wanted to be Admiral ... Noble fights with noble , bishop with bishop ; no sooner has the Viceroy healed a quarrel here , than it breaks out there . ) The ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
affaire affez affuré Ainfi Aloysius Gonzaga Araoz asked auffi aufli auroit avoient avoit Borgia Borgia's Bulle c'eft c'étoit Cardinal de Noailles Cardinal de Rohan Cartagena caufe chofe Claver Claver's Concile Confeil Conftitution Déclaration died difpofitions Duke efperer efprit Eminence eſt étoient étoit Evêques fact faifoit faint fans felt fenti fentimens feroit fervir feulement figné filence fimple first foit fon Alteffe Royale found fuis Gandia great house Ignatius interêts Jesuits l'Abbé Chevalier l'affaire l'Eglife l'Evêque Laffiteau laiffer leave left lettre life little made make maniere Maréchal d'Huxelles Miniftre Monfeigneur Monfieur n'avoit n'eft néceffaire negroes never no doubt once paffer Pape penfe perfonne perfuadé perhaps plufieurs pouvoit préfent Préfident Prélats premiere propofer propofitions raifons refpect Regent Regis Rome Romigny Sainteté Society Spain teffe tems time tion town Tremoille vûes whole work wrote years сс сс ככ כל
Popular passages
Page 153 - And a man shall be as an hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest ; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land.
Page 11 - If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with Kings nor lose the common touch; If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you; If all men count with you, but none too much; If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds...
Page 159 - To go on forever and fail and go on again, And be mauled to the earth and arise, And contend for the shade of a word and a thing not seen with the eyes : With the half of a broken hope for a pillow at night That somehow the right is the right And the smooth shall bloom from the rough : Lord, if that were enough...
Page 25 - Be not ashamed to make confession of thy sins; And force not the current of the river. Lay not thyself down for a fool to tread upon; And accept not the person of one that is mighty. Strive for the truth unto death, and the Lord God shall fight for thee.
Page 53 - En un mol, la philosophie divise les hommes par les opinions, la religion les unit dans les mêmes principes ; il ya .donc un central éternel .entre la politique et la religion. Tout État, si j'ose le dire, est un vaisseau mystérieux qui a ses ancres dans le Ciel.
Page 159 - If to feel, in the ink of the slough And the sink of the mire, Veins of glory and fire Run through and transpierce and transpire, And a secret purpose of glory in every part, And the answering glory of battle fill my heart...
Page 168 - Prince, la lettre que Votre Excellence m'a fait l'honneur de m'écrire le 10 du mois dernier m'est parvenue. L'Empereur...
Page 190 - ... civilize. And again and again, among those whom tradition and environment and creed should have humanized, we have seen a defective character accentuate itself precisely in its defects, especially when it knows its behaviour to be unwarrantable, and deserves, but does not receive, rebuke. There are few things so exasperating as to have a man patient at one's expense; silence may be the worst of snubs ; and holiness, when it does not convert, may very easily drive the perverse into active evil....
Page 245 - Paris, en laquelle on tient l'authorité du concile par dessus le pape, et sont censurez, comme hérétiques, ceux qui tiennent le contraire. Qu'en France on tient le concile de Constance pour...
Page 248 - Dira-t-on que les papes nous ont donné le privilège de foutenir qu'ils n'ont aucun droit fur le temporel ; qu'ils font obligés d'obéir aux conciles généraux , que nous ne devons recevoir leurs légats qu'après avoir examiné leurs pouvoirs ; que la puiflance des papes n'eft point abfolue & fans bornes, mais qu'elle doit être limitée par les anciens canons; que les premières décrétâtes font des inventions de l'efprit humain , pour donner aux papes des pouvoirs inconnus aux premiers...