The history of the Druids. Cicero illustratus. De inventione typographiae. De Jordano Bruno. Jordano Bruno's Innumerable worlds. Books ascribed to the apostles, & c. Secret history of the South-seaJ. Whiston, S. Baker, and J. Robinson, 1747 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 12 筆
第 7 頁
... Greece itfelf properly fo call'd , in Macedonia , in Crete and the Ilands of the Archipelago , in Afia , Rhodes , part of Italy , in Sicily , and Marseilles ; and at this time of the Sclavonian language , whofe dialects not only prevail ...
... Greece itfelf properly fo call'd , in Macedonia , in Crete and the Ilands of the Archipelago , in Afia , Rhodes , part of Italy , in Sicily , and Marseilles ; and at this time of the Sclavonian language , whofe dialects not only prevail ...
第 34 頁
... Greece , betoken Strength of Body , but the Force of Eloquence ; which is there very beautifully display'd by the Druid , in his explication of the picture that hung in the Temple . Now , the Critics of all nations , have made a heavy ...
... Greece , betoken Strength of Body , but the Force of Eloquence ; which is there very beautifully display'd by the Druid , in his explication of the picture that hung in the Temple . Now , the Critics of all nations , have made a heavy ...
第 43 頁
... Greece he was , as PHURNUTUS affures us , myftically ac- counted ( 62 ) that Reafon which is diffus'd thro ( 59 ) Pars Suevorum & Ifidi facrificat . Unde caufa et origo peregrino facro parum comperi ; nifi quod fignum ipfum , in modum ...
... Greece he was , as PHURNUTUS affures us , myftically ac- counted ( 62 ) that Reafon which is diffus'd thro ( 59 ) Pars Suevorum & Ifidi facrificat . Unde caufa et origo peregrino facro parum comperi ; nifi quod fignum ipfum , in modum ...
第 52 頁
... had their informa- tion ( not to speak now of the Gauls seated in Greece it felf and in leffer Afia ) as the later Greecs had theirs from the Romans ; and , by good good fortune , we have a vast number of passa- 32 THE HISTORY.
... had their informa- tion ( not to speak now of the Gauls seated in Greece it felf and in leffer Afia ) as the later Greecs had theirs from the Romans ; and , by good good fortune , we have a vast number of passa- 32 THE HISTORY.
第 126 頁
... Greece , he came to Marseilles , and so into Gaule . Then he went to the house where his wife was , belonging to a man of the greatest authority among the Gauls , and intreated to be lodg'd there : whereupon thofe of the fa- mily ...
... Greece , he came to Marseilles , and so into Gaule . Then he went to the house where his wife was , belonging to a man of the greatest authority among the Gauls , and intreated to be lodg'd there : whereupon thofe of the fa- mily ...
常見字詞
againſt alfo aliis alſo Amyntor Anfwer antient Apoftles APPIUS Author Bank becauſe befides BELENUS Book BRETANNUS call'd Celtic Celtic Language Chriftian CHRIST Cicero cou'd Court of Directors cùm Decemvirs defire Druids Ecclef effe Engliſh enim etiam faid fame fays fecond felf feveral fhall fhould fibi fince firft firſt fome ftill ftones fubject fuch funt Gaule Gospel Greec haec Haeref Hift Hiftory himſelf Houſe Hyperborean Iland infinite Ireland Iriſh King laft laſt learned leaſt lefs leſs Letter likewife LORD mention'd moft mony moſt muſt neque nihil obferve occafion paffage perfons Philofophers planè prefent publifh'd purpoſe PYTHEAS quae quàm quod reaſon refpect ſay Scotland ſeveral ſome ſpeak ſtock ſtone STRABO ſuch tamen thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe tion TOLAND Treaſury underſtand uſe verò weft whereof whofe wou'd write δε
熱門章節
第 lxxvi 頁 - An Act for the better securing the dependency of the kingdom of Ireland upon the crown of Great Britain.
第 xxxvi 頁 - Some Reflections on that part of a Book called Amyntor, or a Defence of Milton's Life, written by Toland, which relates to the Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the Canon of the New Testament, in a Letter to a Friend.
第 xxv 頁 - T is, at last, driven out of our kingdom ; the poor gentleman, by his imprudent management, had raised such an universal outcry, that it was even dangerous for a man to have been known once to converse •with him. This made all wary men of reputation decline seeing him; insomuch that at last he wanted a meal's meat, (as I am told,) and none would admit him to their tables. The little...
第 xxx 頁 - AMYNTOR : or, a defence of Milton's life. Containing I. A general apology for all writings of that kind. II. A catalogue of books attributed in the primitive times to Jesus Christ, his apostles and other eminent persons : with several important remarks and observations relating to the canon of Scripture.
第 45 頁 - ... and of this Toland himself was, in some measure, aware, when he said that " notwithstanding the long state of barbarity in which that nation hath lain, and after all the rebellions and wars with which the kingdom has been harassed, they (the Irish) have incomparably more ancient materials of that kind for their history, to which even their mythology is not unserviceable, than either the English, or the French, or any other European nation with whose ancient manuscripts I have any acquaintance.
第 346 頁 - ... utmoft bottom, whence, as by the hand of an artificer, things are irreparably ftruck into nothing. There are no ends, limits, margins, or walls, that keep back or fubftrad any parcel of the infinite abundance of things. Thence it is, that the earth and fea are ever equally fertile, and thence the perpetual brightness of the fun ; eternal fuel circulating to thofe devouring fires, and a fupply of waters being eternally furnifh'd to the evaporated feas, from the infinite and ever renewing magazine...
第 89 頁 - Seaforis and the Elements, particularly to the Sea and the Winds, as appears by the rudder in the middle.
第 317 頁 - I had an eye to him, does menace me; another, for being only observed, does assault me ; for coming near this man, he bites me ; and for laying hold of that other, he devours me. 'Tis not one who treats me in this manner, nor are they a few; they are many, and almost all.
第 58 頁 - Many of them also which used curious arts brought their books together, and burned them before all men: and they counted the price of them, and found if fifty thousand pieces of silver.
第 122 頁 - ... as if they should be very sorry to be set free. Nor will I grudge telling here, what, of all these matters, appeared the most absurd to me : the painter finding no place where to fix the extreme links of the chains, the right hand being occupied with a club, and the left with a bow, he made a hole in the tip of the god's tongue, who turns smiling towards those he he leads, and painted them as drawn from thence.