| Henry Hart Milman - 1855 - 700 頁
...total silence. For St. Benedict, for St. Dominic, for St. Francis he has the profoundest reverence.11 But it is against their degenerate sons that he arrays...rapacity, their arts, their lies, their hypocrisy, their intrusion into the functions of the Clergy, their delicate attire, their dainty feasts, their magnificent... | |
| Henry Hart Milman - 1855 - 700 頁
...total silence. For St. Benedict, for St. Dominic, for St. Francis he has the profoundest reverence.k But it is against their degenerate sons that he arrays...furnish every impersonated vice, are foes to every v irtue ; his bitterest satire, his keenest irony (and these weapons he wields with wonderful poetic... | |
| Henry Hart Milman - 1864 - 454 頁
...that Cardinals Come in. And where they Lie and Linger, — Lechery there reigneth." —Wright, p. 420. that on this all honest English indignation was agreed)...rapacity, their arts, their lies, their hypocrisy, their intrusion into the functions of the Clergy, their delicate attire, their dainty feasts, their magnificent... | |
| Edward Shepherd Creasy - 1870 - 620 頁
...might seem that on this all honest English indignation was agreed) is against the mendicant orders. The Friars furnish every impersonated vice ; are foes...every virtue. His bitterest satire, his keenest irony, are against their dissoluteness, their idleness, their pride, their rapacity, their arts, their lies,... | |
| Frederick James Furnivall, William Richard Morfill - 1872 - 520 頁
...total silence. For St. Benedict, for St. Dominic, for St. Francis he has the profoundest reverence.4 But it is against their degenerate sons that he arrays...rapacity, their arts, their lies, their hypocrisy, their intrusion into the functions of the Clergy, their delicate attire, their dainty feasts, their magnificent... | |
| Henry Hart Milman - 1880 - 576 頁
...total silence. For St. Benedict, for St. Dominic, for St. Franc-is he has the profoundest reverence.5 But it is against their degenerate sons that he arrays his allegorical Host ; the Friars far» Fuse. vi. p. 78. > " Slthen Prayed to the Pope, — hare Pity of Holy Chnnh, And no Grace to... | |
| William Langland - 1881 - 288 頁
...reconciling the Sovereigns of the world to universal amity. It is the actual Pope, the Pope of Avignon or of Rome, levying the wealth of the world to slay mankind,...are foes to every virtue : his bitterest satire, his • A sentence here follows, which is based on a misconception. The phrase 'Piers pardon the Ploughman'... | |
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