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...onsciences.” This is the fourth published translation of this treatise into English. The first was made by Wace and Buchheim (London, 1896). The sec... ...there has been careful comparison with the original text and with the other English translations. The result is in some measure a new translation. T... ... English translations. The result is in some measure a new translation. The English of the Steinhäuser text has been revised in order to bring it in... ... 37 Verklärung etlicher Artikel in einem Sermon rom heiligen Sakrament (1520). WA 6, 80. 38 Followers of the mar... ..., S. J. (Westminster, Maryland, 1957), p. 31. (Vol. 25 of Ancient Christian Writers.) 50 infanti, a child under the age of seven years. St. L. 19, ... ...briefly comprehended in the word of this testament. For this reason popular sermons ought to be nothing else than expositions of the mass, or explana... ...e Ninety-five Theses, LW 31, 105, the incident is more fully described in a sermon on Matthew 18, WA 47, 302–303. The court jester of a certain Roman...
...tion and an acuteness in the delineation of character.” FORD MADOX FORD, English novelist, about Bartlett: “...a writer of very considerable merit.... ...you try? We need new blood.” I suppose he is right. If we rely on the old writers altogether, the stage will become stale. Perhaps I can think of so... ...the courtesy of the translator, Dr. Ray Rummers, Chairman, Department of English, Baylor University. LEONARDO DA VINCI... ... that way. Was the church beautiful? It seems so. She disapproved of the sermons: “Latin rote...I can teach you...listen to me.” I listened. “The... ... said to me: I am Hamnet, come, we’ll go to the guild chapel and hear the sermon...it was a cold sermon but hon- eysuckle was blooming in the garden.... ...ours in his cabin where I gave up to his booked walls: volumes in French, English, Italian, Greek, manuscripts in Latin and Hebrew, his literary wor... ...ly from the Bible, eager to please his congregation. Today he is probably sermonizing from Job: the war must weigh on him because he is a just and c...
...ing student publication project to bring classical works of literature, in English, to free and easy access of those wishing to make use of them. Cove... ...) you’re a distinguished man, an author.” “Nowadays, daddy, they call them writers.” “Not authors? I didn’t know. Well, let it be writers then, but I ... ...em. I brought the old man news of the literary 31 Dostoevsky world and of writers, in whom he began, I don’t know why, to take an intense interest. H... ... put him into a fine dress-coat, or something like it, and take him to the English club and call him the great landowner, count Barabanov; he’ll pass ... ...h your while. Why, it was there, in Paris, at Mme. Joubert’ s, we broke an English pier-glass.” “What did you break?” A pier-glass. There was a lookin... ...m one of those people who can do nothing sensible themselves, but can read sermons to 141 Dostoevsky other people. Now, listen, I’ll look in, perhaps... ...ord! I met it somewhere in one of you 246 The Insulted and Injured modern writers!” “Well, that was a madman, but you….” “I’m in my right mind?” “Yes...
...g student publica- tion project to bring classical works of literature, in English, to free and easy access of those wishing to make use of them. Cove... ... of the Book of Job, and had somehow got hold of a copy of the sayings and sermons of “the God fearing Father Isaac the Syrian, which he read persiste... ...i- ably, and was very fond of cleaning his smart calf boots with a special English polish, so that they shone like mirrors. He turned out a first rate... ...n country than we are? I wouldn’t change a dandy I know of for three young englishmen,” observed Marya Kondratyevna tenderly , doubt- less accompanyin... ... Leo Tolstoy has never invented. Yet such dreams are sometimes seen not by writers, but by the most ordinary people, officials, journalists, priests…....