The Transactions of the Honourable Society of CymmrodorionThe Society, 1898 |
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Side xxxiv
... Land Club : T. Simpson Jones , Honorary Secretary , Gungrog Hall , Welshpool . Royal Institution of Cornwall : Major Edward Parkyn , Secretary , Truro . Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland : Robert Cochrane , F.S.A. , Honorary ...
... Land Club : T. Simpson Jones , Honorary Secretary , Gungrog Hall , Welshpool . Royal Institution of Cornwall : Major Edward Parkyn , Secretary , Truro . Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland : Robert Cochrane , F.S.A. , Honorary ...
Side 14
... land ; and any remarks which I may make to you to - night , I make , not as an expert , not as one who has any special knowledge or any claim to speak dogmatically upon these matters , but as an observer and a wayfarer . As we look ...
... land ; and any remarks which I may make to you to - night , I make , not as an expert , not as one who has any special knowledge or any claim to speak dogmatically upon these matters , but as an observer and a wayfarer . As we look ...
Side 15
... of Wales and in other lands , but I think they have almost all shown it with a personal pride in their early training and recol- lections and associations connected with their life in Wales . DOMESTIC AND DECORATIVE ART IN WALES . 15.
... of Wales and in other lands , but I think they have almost all shown it with a personal pride in their early training and recol- lections and associations connected with their life in Wales . DOMESTIC AND DECORATIVE ART IN WALES . 15.
Side 17
... land- scape and of the life of Wales should be left to artists from outside , and that their products should be for a public outside Wales . Their pictures do not pass through the mind or the heart of Wales . This must be so , until we ...
... land- scape and of the life of Wales should be left to artists from outside , and that their products should be for a public outside Wales . Their pictures do not pass through the mind or the heart of Wales . This must be so , until we ...
Side 25
... land in Wales , or into that most interesting question of the future of South Kensington , I think it is interesting at any rate , and perhaps right , that we should mark and ponder over this dictum of Ruskin ; for I must admit that ...
... land in Wales , or into that most interesting question of the future of South Kensington , I think it is interesting at any rate , and perhaps right , that we should mark and ponder over this dictum of Ruskin ; for I must admit that ...
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ac yn Alfred Nutt Arthur Arthurian baptism bards Bart Bersham Bishop Boniface Breton Britain Britannia British book Brymbo Cardiff Celtic century Chancery Lane Christian Chronicle Church copy Cornwall Council crwth Cymry Davies edition Edward Eisteddfod England English furnace Geoffrey Geoffrey of Monmouth Geoffrey's Giraldus Griffith Hall hand harp Henry Historia Regum Britanniae Honourable Society houses Howel Hughes interest Ireland Irish iron Isaac Wilkinson John Wilkinson Jones king land laws legend Lewis literature Llewelyn Lloyd llyfrau Lord mewn Nennius old Welsh Owen Glyndwr Owen's paper parish perhaps Pope printed Professor Rhys Right Rev Road Robert Roman Salesbury Saxon schools Society of Cymmrodorion South Wales stone Street swyddfa Thomas tion Tonic Sol-fa VINCENT EVANS wedi Welsh books Welsh music Welshmen William William Salesbury words Wrexham writers Yr oedd
Populære passager
Side 95 - 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 84 - 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 44 - Saturday with assignats. The Presbyterian tradesmen receive them in payment for goods, by which intercourse they have frequent opportunities to corrupt the principles of that description of men, by infusing into their minds the pernicious tenets of Paine's Rights of Man...
Side 68 - I do also the kings of the Saxons to William of Malmesbury and Henry of Huntingdon. But 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 38 - 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.
Side 69 - 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 36 - This city was of undoubted antiquity, and handsomely built of masonry, with courses of bricks, by the Romans. Many vestiges of its former splendour may yet be seen; immense palaces formerly ornamented with gilded roofs, in imitation of Roman magnificence...
Side 81 - ... eloquence, and learned in foreign histories, offered me a very ancient book in the British tongue, which, in a continued regular story and elegant style, related the actions of them all, from Brutus the first king of the Britons, down to Cadwallader the son of Cadwallo. At his request, therefore, though I had not made fine language my study, by collecting florid expressions, from other authors, yet contented with my own homely style, I undertook the translation of that book into Latin.