The Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, Bind 4The Society., 1898 |
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Side 17
... century and a half been more and more divorced , and I am convinced , from what I can read and learn and observe , that we can never expect a real pervasive feeling and taste for art until this divorce . between the artist and his ...
... century and a half been more and more divorced , and I am convinced , from what I can read and learn and observe , that we can never expect a real pervasive feeling and taste for art until this divorce . between the artist and his ...
Side 18
... century and a half have brought into the art and industry of this country . I think that that divorce has had a bad effect upon both the artists of our day and upon the workmen , the craftsmen of our day . When the artist , say the ...
... century and a half have brought into the art and industry of this country . I think that that divorce has had a bad effect upon both the artists of our day and upon the workmen , the craftsmen of our day . When the artist , say the ...
Side 30
... centuries . They are silent witnesses of the generations that have passed away in those villages , and they are wit- nesses to this day of the beauty of design and of the instinctive skill which a Welshman in the early , the 9th , 10th ...
... centuries . They are silent witnesses of the generations that have passed away in those villages , and they are wit- nesses to this day of the beauty of design and of the instinctive skill which a Welshman in the early , the 9th , 10th ...
Side 44
... Ludlow as a base was a curious anticipation of those marches from the same base half a century later , which placed the Mortimer line upon the throne in the person of Edward IV . Now the rule of the Lords Marcher in South and.
... Ludlow as a base was a curious anticipation of those marches from the same base half a century later , which placed the Mortimer line upon the throne in the person of Edward IV . Now the rule of the Lords Marcher in South and.
Side 50
... centuries , at least , as mercenaries in many battlefields of Europe , more particularly employed by the English kings from Henry II's time onwards . We meet with these Welsh mercenaries in the English army , and also in the English ...
... centuries , at least , as mercenaries in many battlefields of Europe , more particularly employed by the English kings from Henry II's time onwards . We meet with these Welsh mercenaries in the English army , and also in the English ...
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ac yn Alfred Nutt Annus Arthur baptism Bards Bart Bersham Bishop Boniface Britons Brut Brut y Tywysogion Brymbo canu Cardiff Castle Celtic century Christian chronicle Church copy Council crwth Cymru Davies death delyn Earl edition Edward Eisteddfod England English father filius France furnace Geoffrey Geoffrey's Giraldus Griffith Gruffydd Gruffydd ap Llywelyn Gwynedd harp Honourable Society Hughes Iolo Goch Irish iron Isaac Wilkinson John Wilkinson Jones king land Lawgoch legend Lewis Llewelyn Lloyd London Lord manor mewn Nennius Norman Owain Owain Lawgoch Owen's paper parish Pope prædicti prince printed Professor quod Record Regis Rhodri Rhys Robert Roman Salesbury Society of Cymmrodorion stone Thomas tion wedi Welsh books Welsh language Welsh music Welshmen William William Salesbury words Wrexham writers Yr oedd
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Side 91 - And truth is this to me, and that to thee ; And truth or clothed or naked let it be. Rain, sun, and rain ! and the free blossom blows ; Sun, rain, and sun ! and where is he who knows ? From the great deep to the great deep he goes...
Side 48 - A grave for March, a grave for Gwythur, A grave for Gwgawn of the ruddy Sword, Not wise (the thought) a grave for Arthur.
Side 64 - I advise them to be silent concerning the kings of the Britons since they have not that book written in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain, and which being a true history published in honour of those princes, I have thus taken care to translate.
Side 80 - The knights in it that were famous for feats of chivalry, wore their clothes and arms all of the same colour and fashion : and the women also no less celebrated for their wit, wore all the same kind of apparel; and esteemed none worthy of their love, but such as had given a proof of their valour in three several battles. Thus was the valour of the men an encouragement for the women's chastity, and the love of the women a spur to the soldier's bravery.
Side 41 - In the northern district of Britain, beyond the Humber, and on the borders of Yorkshire, the inhabitants make use of the same kind of symphonious harmony, but with less.
Side 60 - Britones soient jurgari cum Francis pro rege « Arturo, idem vir coepit rixari cum uno ex famulis nostris, « nomine Haganello, qui erat ex familia domni Guidonis, . « Landunensis archidiaconi, dicens adhuc Arturum vivere. « Unde non parvo tumultu exorto, cum armis ecclesiam « irruunt plurimi, et, nisi praefatus Algardus clericus obsti« tisset paene usque ad sanguinis effusionem ventum fuisset.
Side 100 - Vols. xiii, xiv, xv, and xvi. 10s. 6rf. per volume. [Vols. i and iii are out of print.] The History of the Cymmrodorion. Out of print. A Dictionary in Englyshe and Welshe, by Wyllyam Salesbury (1547). Facsimile, black letter. 4 parts, 2.?.
Side 64 - Education," on the supposition that it does not teach us definitely how to advance our manufactures, or to improve our lands, or to better our civil economy ; or again, if it does not at once make this man a lawyer, that an engineer, and that a surgeon ; or at least if it does not lead to discoveries in chemistry, astronomy, geology, magnetism, and science of every kind.
Side 65 - In their musical concerts they do not sing in unison like the inhabitants of other countries, but in many different parts; so that in a company of singers, which one very frequently meets with in Wales, you will hear as many different parts and voices as there are performers, who all at length unite, with organic melody, in one consonance and the soft sweetness of B flat.
Side 34 - These trees supporting the roof -tree are called gavaels, forks, or columns, and they form the nave of the tribal house. Then, at some distance back from these rows of columns or forks, low walls of stakes and wattle shut in the aisles of the house, and over all is the roof of branches and rough thatch, while at the aisles behind the pillars are placed beds of rushes, called gwely (lecti), on which the inmates sleep.