| John Nichols - England - 1823 - 680 pages
...here employ, Oh may we both each other long enjoy ! In the Orchard was a little Batiqueting-house ', adorned with great curiosity, having the Liberal Arts...regula certa, Qui me non didicit csetera nulla petat. O'er speech I rule, all tongues my laws restrain, Who knows not me seeks other arts in vain. DONATUS,... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1834 - 784 pages
...audible, all things dissolve into anarchy and confusion. In the orchard was a little banquetting-house, adorned with great curiosity, having the liberal arts...expressive of the benefits derived from the study of them. GRAMMAR. Lex sum sermonis linguaruin regula certa, Qui me non didicit cectera nulla petat. ARITHMETICK.... | |
| Francis Bacon, Basil Montagu - 1834 - 376 pages
...banquetting-house, adorned with great curiosity, having the liberal arts beautifully depicted on ils walls, over them the pictures of such learned men as had excelled m each, and under them, verses expressive of the benefits derived from the study of them. GRAMMAR.... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1845 - 970 pages
...potest. Sictiue mei cultor, sic est mihi cultus et Orpheus : Floreat O noster cultus amorque diu ! In the Orchard was a little Banqueting-house, adorned...GRAMMAR. Lex sum sermonis, linguarum regula certa, Qui me noil didicit castera nulla petat. DONATUS, LILLY, SERVIUS, and PRISCIAN. ARITHMETIC. Injrenium exacuo,... | |
| English essays - 1845 - 732 pages
...noster cultus amorque diu ! In the Orchard was a little Banqueting-house, adorned with greatcuriosity, having the Liberal Arts beautifully depicted on its...placed, follow: GRAMMAR. Lex sum sermonis, linguarum reirula certa, Qui me non didicit ca'tera nulla petat. UONATUS, LILLY, SERVIUS, and I'RISCIAN. ARITHMETIC.... | |
| William Francis C. Wigston - Rosicrucians - 1891 - 502 pages
...thus bringing Solomon into touch historically with RICOH'S fable of the " New Atlantis." portraits of such learned men as had excelled in each, and under...expressive of the benefits derived from the study of them : — GRAMMAR. — ' Lex sum sermonis, linguarum regnla certa. Qui me non didicit csetera nulla petat.'... | |
| Questions and answers - 1893 - 390 pages
...First, the walls have the liberal arts beautifully depicted upon them, and over them the portraits of such learned men as had excelled in each, and under...the benefits derived from the study of them. These were furnished to Kenneth RH Mackenzie, IX" (" Cryptonymus "), by Captain NG Phillips, 33° : DONATUS,... | |
| Catherine Drinker Bowen - Biography & Autobiography - 1993 - 294 pages
..."adorned with great curiosity," says an old writer, "having the liberal arts beautifully depicted on the walls; over them the pictures of such learned men as had excelled in each." Music had its place, Rhetoric, Logic, Geometry, Grammar, Astrology — each with its rhymed couplet:... | |
| Patrick Collinson, Anthony Fletcher, Peter Roberts - History - 2006 - 402 pages
...Orpheus stood above these verses and that a small banqueting house which still stood in the orchard was adorned with great 'curiosity' having the Liberal Arts beautifully depicted on its walls 'with the heads of Cicero, Aristotle and other illustrious antients and moderns who had excelled in... | |
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