| Sir Henry Craik - 1911 - 442 páginas
...Selden must have exercised upon him, then, and, in spite of all differences, in far later years. " Mr. Selden was a person whom no character can flatter,...in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages (as may appear in his excellent... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1913 - 624 páginas
...he will be looked upon by posterity as a brave bad man. (From the Same.) CLARENDON'S EARLY FRIENDS MR. SELDEN was a person whom no character can flatter,...in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages, (as may appear in his excellent... | |
| Charles Whibley - 1917 - 626 páginas
...passage in which he does honour to Selden does honour to himself. ' Mr. Selden was a person,' he wrote, ' whom no character can flatter, or transmit in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages, that a man would have thought he... | |
| John Selden, Selden Society - 1927 - 250 páginas
...and as good company to those whom he liked.' ' Mr. Selden,' says Lord Clarendon (Life, pt. ip 16), 'was a person whom no character can flatter, or transmit...in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages (as may appear in his excellent... | |
| John Selden, Selden Society - 1927 - 246 páginas
...and as good company to those whom he liked.' ' Mr. Selden,' says Lord Clarendon (Life, pt. ip 16), ' was a person whom no character can flatter, or transmit...in any expressions equal to his merit and virtue. He was of so stupendous learning in all kinds and in all languages (as may appear in his excellent... | |
| Halliday, Bernard, Firm, Booksellers, Leicester, Eng - 1927 - 954 páginas
...The great Earl of Clarendon, who was his intimate friend for many years, said of Seiden : r. Seiden was a person whom no character can flatter, or transmit in any expressions J to his merit. He was of such stupendous learning in all kinds and all languages, as may or from his... | |
| Stephen C. Manganiello - 2004 - 632 páginas
...nothing more than upon "having had Mr. Selden's acquaintance from the time he was very young." Mr. Seiden was a person whom no character can flatter or transmit in any experience equal to his merit and virtue. Clarendon SELF-DENYING ORDINANCE By 1644, it was apparent... | |
| Robert Walsh, Eliakim Littell, John Jay Smith - 1841 - 564 páginas
...not, they read on." Of Seiden, whose opinion is here quoted, thus speaketh Lord Clarendon : " He was s multiplied themselves by this reflection of their being,) who passed through the material f The places and persons agreed upon for the Hebrew, with the particular books by them undertaken, were... | |
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