Albertani Brixiensis Liber consolationis et consilii: ex quo hausta est fabula de Melibeo et Prudentia : quam anglice redditam et The Tale of Melibe inscriptam, Galfridus Chaucer inter Canterbury tales recepit

Front Cover
pro Societate chauceriana, N. Trübner & Company, 1873 - 136 pages
 

Selected pages

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 85 - Diliges Dominum Deum tuum ex toto corde tuo, et ex tota anima tua, et ex omnibus viribus tuis, et ex omni mente tua : et proximum tuum sicut teipsum.
Page 103 - Omne animi vitium tanto conspectius in se Crimen habet, quanto major, qui peccat, habetur.
Page xxiv - Anno 1246, e traslatati ne' medesimi tempi, in volgar Fiorentino, riveduti con più testi a penna e riscontri con lo stesso testo latino, dallo' Nferigno Accademico della Crusca.
Page xxiv - Richesse, poème composé, en 1342, par Jean Bruyant, notaire au Châtelet de Paris. Publié pour la première fois par la Société des Bibliophiles françois.
Page xvii - inculcating sounder principles regarding feuds and private vengeance,' and (p. xvii) of 'the goal he had proposed: condemnation of feuds and wilful wars, and submission to law.' ' WF Butler, The Lombard Communes [1906], pp. 191-193, points out that many nobles had fortified towers right in the heart of the cities, and that 'Where the party of peace got the upper hand for a moment a favourite policy was to reduce the height of the towers to a uniform level. In Genoa all were...
Page 21 - Qui prudens est, et temperans est ; qui temperans est, et constans est ; qui constans est, et imperturbatus est ; qui imperturbatus est, sine tristitia est ; qui sine tristitia est, beatus est ; ergo prudens beatus est, et prudentia ad beatam vitam satis est
Page 46 - si contuderis stultum in pila quasi ptisanas feriente desuper pilo, non auferetur ab eo stultitia eius
Page 109 - Interim vocem aeternae veritatis magno animo et certa fide sequamur quae dicit: pro justitia agonizare pro anima tua, et usque ad mortem certa pro justitia, et Deus expugnabit pro te inimicos tuos3).
Page 83 - Nihil enim mihi conscius sum : sed non in hoc justificatus sum : qui autem judicat me Dominus est. Itaque nolite ante tempus judicare, quoadusque veniat Dominus : qui et illuminabit abscondita tenebrarum, et manifestabit consilia cordium : et tune laus erit unicuique a Deo.
Page xiii - ... towers right in the heart of the cities, and that 'Where the party of peace got the upper hand for a moment a favourite policy was to reduce the height of the towers to a uniform level. In Genoa all were cut down in 1196 to 80 feet.

Bibliographic information