Taliesin, Or, The Bards and Druids of Britain: A Translation of the Remains of the Earliest Welsh Bards, and an Examination of the Bardic Mysteries |
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Page vii
... passages may be disputed ; but I believe that , so far as regards the tenor and contents of these compositions , the translations given will meet with the approbation of the majority of Welsh scholars . In truth , the translation of ...
... passages may be disputed ; but I believe that , so far as regards the tenor and contents of these compositions , the translations given will meet with the approbation of the majority of Welsh scholars . In truth , the translation of ...
Page 11
... passage , that even one of the earliest editors of Diodorus could not refrain in his index from writing , ' See whether this cannot be applied to Anglica ! ' Pindar , a contemporary , or nearly so , of Hecatæus , also mentions the ...
... passage , that even one of the earliest editors of Diodorus could not refrain in his index from writing , ' See whether this cannot be applied to Anglica ! ' Pindar , a contemporary , or nearly so , of Hecatæus , also mentions the ...
Page 41
... passage in the commencement of the seventh book , shows that the pro- phecies of Merlin had at that period attracted public attention : " I had not got thus far in my history , when the subject of public discourse happening to be ...
... passage in the commencement of the seventh book , shows that the pro- phecies of Merlin had at that period attracted public attention : " I had not got thus far in my history , when the subject of public discourse happening to be ...
Page 45
... passage in the Gododin of Aneurin : ? ___ : 2- Mi na vi Aneurin Ys gwyr talyessin Oveg Kywrenhin Neu cheing e ododin Kynn gwawr dyd dilin . 1 A pestilence , called the Yellow Plague , represented as a serpent . 2 Stanza 45 in edition of ...
... passage in the Gododin of Aneurin : ? ___ : 2- Mi na vi Aneurin Ys gwyr talyessin Oveg Kywrenhin Neu cheing e ododin Kynn gwawr dyd dilin . 1 A pestilence , called the Yellow Plague , represented as a serpent . 2 Stanza 45 in edition of ...
Page 46
... passage in question is not altogether above suspicion . 2 Without offering any opinion adverse to the general correctness of this translation by a writer who evinces a very intimate acquaintance with his subject and the circle of ...
... passage in question is not altogether above suspicion . 2 Without offering any opinion adverse to the general correctness of this translation by a writer who evinces a very intimate acquaintance with his subject and the circle of ...
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Common terms and phrases
according allusions ancient antiquity appears Arthur Bards battle Britain British Britons called celebrated century character chief Christ Christian cloth collection compositions connected contain Davies death doctrines Druidic Druids early earth Edited Edward Elphin English evidence existence fact four give given hand heaven horse hundred illustrative interesting Irish King known land language latter learned lines literature Lord meaning mentioned minstrels mystery Myvyrian nature Notes notice obtained original Owen passage period persons piece plates poems poet poetry praise present preserved prince printed probably published reference relating remains Rheged romance Saint says sixth century song stanzas story supposed Taliesin traditions translation twelfth century Urien volume Wales Welsh writers written
Popular passages
Page 181 - So they took the blossoms of the oak, and the blossoms of the broom, and the blossoms of the meadow-sweet, and produced from them a maiden, the fairest and most graceful that man ever saw.
Page 268 - Else, if thou wilt not let my people go, behold, I will send swarms of flies upon thee, and upon thy servants, and upon thy people, and into thy houses: and the houses of the Egyptians shall be full of swarms of flies, and also the ground whereon they are.
Page 266 - And the LORD said unto Moses, Say unto Aaron, Stretch out thy rod, and smite the dust of the land, that it may become lice throughout all the land of Egypt.
Page 346 - Jack Wilson,' the Singer of Shakespeare's Stage?" An Attempt to prove the identity of this person with John Wilson, Doctor of Music in the University of Oxford, AD 1644.
Page 345 - MILTON'S EARLY READING, and the prima stamina of his " Paradise Lost," together with Extracts from a Poet of the XVIth Century (Joshua Sylvester).
Page 345 - The Anglo-Norman Period. Thick 8vo, cloth, 6s (original price 12s) Published under the superintendence of the Council of the Royal Society of Literature. There is no work in the English Language which gives the reader such a comprehensive and connected History of the Literature of these periods.
Page 213 - And seven score knobs in his collar. And when we went with Arthur of mournful memory, Except seven, none returned from Caer Vandwy (or the inclosure resting on the height).
Page 346 - SHAKESPEARE'S LIBRARY.— A Collection of the Romances, Novels, Poems, and Histories used by Shakespeare as the foundation of his Dramas, now first collected and accurately reprinted from the original Editions, with Notes, &c.