The Life of the Chevalier Bayard

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Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1847 - 401 Seiten
 

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Seite 178 - Ye have the account Of my performance : what remains, ye gods ! But up, and enter now into full bliss ?" So having said, a while he stood, expecting Their universal shout, and high applause, To fill his ear ; when, contrary, he hears On all sides, from innumerable tongues, A dismal universal hiss, the sound Of public scorn...
Seite v - I er devait l'honneur d'être chevalier crut honorer l'un et l'autre en chargeant continuellement le nom de Bayard du titre de chevalier ; il intitula son livre : De la très joyeuse et plaisante histoire, composée par le loyal serviteur de faits gestes et prouesses du bon chevalier sans peur et sans reproche , titres donnés alors, parceque c'était la mode, à Daubigny, à la Trimouille, à...
Seite ii - Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand eight hundred and forty-seven, by HARPER & BROTHERS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. PREFACE, THE success which has attended the publication of my
Seite 127 - I" was the cry, and each man alighted to tighten the girths of his horse. They were soon remounted and speeding away at a great gallop after the Spaniards who were carrying away the flower and perfection of all gentility.
Seite 272 - Chivalry, with whom none can come in competition, may our blessed Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ, who suffered death and passion for all sinners, reward you both in this world and in the next.
Seite v - Les gestes, ensemble la vie du preulx chevalier Bayard, avec sa généalogie, comparaisons aulx anciens preulx chevaliers, Lyon 1525, f.
Seite 10 - First, you love and serve God in all things without offending him ; night and morning recommend yourself to him. He gave us all that we have, and without him we can do nothing. He will aid you. Second. — Be you mild and courteous to all, casting away pride. Be humble and obliging. Be not a liar nor a slanderer. Be temperate in eating and drinking. Avoid envy — it is a mean excess.
Seite 297 - ... we fell in with their infantry close by their ordnance, with five or six hundred gendarms, who were posted there, having in front of them two wheeled carts, whereon was a great piece of iron, with two planks ten or fifteen feet long.
Seite 136 - After supper the dancing began, and the king himself, who could perform very well in this way, danced with the rest, but not very much. His partner was the Marchioness of Mantua, a wondrous fair lady. Then he made the princes and lords who were there dance, not even excepting the cardinals of Narbonne and St. Severino, and some others, who acquitted themselves as well as they could.
Seite 7 - ... from his father, had taken root in his heart, and therefore he desired to follow the profession of arms, as his ancestors had done. My child, replied the old man, weeping for joy as he spake, God give thee grace so to do ! Thou art like thy grandfather both in features and in make, and he in his time was one of the best knights in Christendom. I will put thee in a way of obtaining thy desire.

Autoren-Profil (1847)

William Gilmore Simms was born in Charleston, South Carolina, April, 17 1806. His academic education was received in the school of his native city, where he was for a time a clerk in a drug and chemical house. Though his first aspirations were for medicine, he studied law at eighteen, but never practised. In 1827, he published in Charleston a volume of Lyrical and other Poems, his first attempt in literature. The following year, he became editor and partial owner of the Charleston City Gazette. In 1829 he published another volume of poems, The Vision of Cortes, and in 1830, The Tricolor. His paper proved a bad investment, and through its failure, in 1833, he was left penniless. Simms decided to devote himself to literature, and began a long series of volumes which did not end till within three years of his death.He published a poem entitled "Atalantis, a Tale of the Sea" (New York, 1832), the best and longest of all his poetic works. The Yemassee is considered his best novel, but Simms is mainly known as a writer of fiction, the scene of his novels is almost wholly southern. He was for many years a member of the legislature, and in 1846 was defeated for lieutenant-governor by only one vote. Simmd died in Charleston on June, 11 1870

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