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Mediaeval Latin 🔍
The University of Chicago Press, 1962, 1962
[edited by] K. P. Harrington, (edited by) K. P.Harrington, Harrington, Karl Pomeroy, Karl Pomeroy Harrington 🔍
description
2 (p1): A Spanish nun makes a pilgrimage to regions famous in sacred history 6 (p2): St.Martin surprises his enemies by an exhibition of miraculous power 9 (p3): Attila,king of the Huns 10 (p4): Attila invades Italy,but is halted by Pope Leo 12 (p5): The death of Attila 14 (p6): The panegyrist compares Theodoric and Alexander the Great 17 (p7): Food-hoarding in the fifth century 18 (p8): A sacristan's adventure with the barbarians 22 (p9): Paradise 23 (p10): The jealousy of the serpent 26 (p11): Gregory explains why he undertakes to write history 27 (p12): Gregory confesses his faith and deplores his ignorance 27 (p13): The founding of Lyons 28 (p14): Attila and the Huns,invading Gaul,are checked at Orleans,and defeated near Chalons-sur-Marne by Aetius 30 (p15): Clovis,king of the Franks,defeats the Alamanni and accepts Christianity,the faith of his queen,Clotilda 32 (p16): Clovis defeats Alaric II and the Visigoths at Vouillé 34 (p17): Clovis by scheming adds the kingdom of Sigibert to his own 36 (p18): Chilperic's legates return from the East 37 (p19): Death of King Chilperic;his character 39 (p20): Beginning of a feud between two families of Tours 42 (p21): The burning of Paris 44 (p22): Temptations of recluses 46 (p23): Outcome of the feud at Tours;death of Sichar 47 (p24): Pope Gregory chosen 51 (p25): Ammonius falls from a height over a precipice 52 (p26): A thief,hanged,but saved by Saint Martin 53 (p27): The boy and the grapes 54 (p28): A beeswax story 57 (p29): Fortunatus sends flowers to Radegunda 59 (p30): He sends a basket of chestnuts 59 (p31): Fortunatus sends thanks to St.Agnes and Radegunda for dainties 60 (p32): Verses penned to Saint Agnes and Radegunda towards the end of a banquet 60 (p33): The triumph of the Cross 62 (p34): The Sacred Tree 64 (p35): Heraclius,his rise to power,his methods,his character 66...
Alternative title
Medieval Latin (English, Latin and Latin Edition)
Alternative edition
United States, United States of America
Alternative edition
Chicago, 1962, ©1925, 1975 printing
Alternative edition
Chicago, United States, 1925
Alternative edition
5th impr, Chicago [etc, 1972
Alternative edition
Chicago, Illinois, 1972
Alternative edition
Chicago, Illinois, 1962
metadata comments
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filepath:/读秀/读秀4.0/读秀/4.0/A-1/40380763.zip
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filepath:40380763.zip — md5:8d34812969db9fca9e7b2233a948454f — filesize:142997222
filepath:/读秀/读秀4.0/读秀/4.0/A-1/40380763.zip
metadata comments
Includes bibliographical references.
Alternative description
2 (p1): A Spanish nun makes a pilgrimage to regions famous in sacred history
6 (p2): St.Martin surprises his enemies by an exhibition of miraculous power
9 (p3): Attila,king of the Huns
10 (p4): Attila invades Italy,but is halted by Pope Leo
12 (p5): The death of Attila
14 (p6): The panegyrist compares Theodoric and Alexander the Great
17 (p7): Food-hoarding in the fifth century
18 (p8): A sacristan's adventure with the barbarians
22 (p9): Paradise
23 (p10): The jealousy of the serpent
26 (p11): Gregory explains why he undertakes to write history
27 (p12): Gregory confesses his faith and deplores his ignorance
27 (p13): The founding of Lyons
28 (p14): Attila and the Huns,invading Gaul,are checked at Orleans,and defeated near Chalons-sur-Marne by Aetius
30 (p15): Clovis,king of the Franks,defeats the Alamanni and accepts Christianity,the faith of his queen,Clotilda
32 (p16): Clovis defeats Alaric II and the Visigoths at Vouillé
34 (p17): Clovis by scheming adds the kingdom of Sigibert to his own
36 (p18): Chilperic's legates return from the East
37 (p19): Death of King Chilperic;his character
39 (p20): Beginning of a feud between two families of Tours
42 (p21): The burning of Paris
44 (p22): Temptations of recluses
46 (p23): Outcome of the feud at Tours;death of Sichar
47 (p24): Pope Gregory chosen
51 (p25): Ammonius falls from a height over a precipice
52 (p26): A thief,hanged,but saved by Saint Martin
53 (p27): The boy and the grapes
54 (p28): A beeswax story
57 (p29): Fortunatus sends flowers to Radegunda
59 (p30): He sends a basket of chestnuts
59 (p31): Fortunatus sends thanks to St.Agnes and Radegunda for dainties
60 (p32): Verses penned to Saint Agnes and Radegunda towards the end of a banquet
60 (p33): The triumph of the Cross
62 (p34): The Sacred Tree
64 (p35): Heraclius,his rise to power,his methods,his character
66 (p36): The Saracens and their conquests
70 (p37): To the Empress Constantina Augusta,with reference to relics
75 (p38): Night
76 (p39): Glass
81 (p40): The martyrdom of Saint Alban
85 (p41): How Christian missionaries came to be sent to Britain
86 (p42): Caedmon and his gift of poesy
88 (p43): An example of monastic asceticism
89 (p44): The martyrdom of the holy innocents
92 (p45): Charlemagne discovers the character of the Germans
94 (p46): How Charlemagne brought up his children
96 (p47): Charlemagne's physique,exercise,bathing
97 (p48): His habits in daily life
98 (p49): His studies and educational ambitions
98 (p50): His devotion to the church
103 (p51): The seven sleepers
104 (p52): The Maelstrom
105 (p53): King Alboin makes alliance with the Huns and defeats the Gepidae
107 (p54): How the Langobards were invited to settle in Italy
108 (p55): A fatal jest
109 (p56): Tiberius Constantinus becomes fiftieth emperor of Rome and finds the treasure of Narses
111 (p57): A royal wooing
113 (p58): Paulus digresses from history to relate a remarkable tale
115 (p59): Paulus discusses his own genealogy
117 (p60): A tyrannous duke and how a joke was played on him
119 (p61): In praise of Lake Como
121 (p62): Paulus disclaims profound linguistic learning,but knows a little Greek
124 (p63): De puero qui in glacie extinctus est
124 (p64): An epitaph for the tomb of the poet Fortunatus
125 (p65): The fable of the sick lion
127 (p66): The calf and the stork
127 (p67): The gout and the flea
130 (p68): Conflictus veris et hiemis
133 (p69): De libris quos legere solebam el qualiter fabulae poetarum a philosophis mystice pertractentur
136 (p70): The siege of Barcelona
141 (p71): A prayer
142 (p72): On horticulture
143 (p73): Lilies
146 (p74): The divisions of nature
147 (p75): An elusive category
152 (p76): Reynard takes Isengrim fishing
160 (p77): How to be a just judge
162 (p78): A sequence on the birthday of the martyr St.Laurence
164 (p79): The story of the martyrdom of Saint Laurence
170 (p80): A joking emperor and a shrewd soldier
172 (p81): Conrad I dies and orders the succession
173 (p82): The assassination of King Berengarius I
176 (p83): The imperial palace at Constantinople and what happened there to the emperor Romanus I
177 (p84): Liutprand as envoy of Berengarius II is received in the palatial"Magnaura" at Constantinople
179 (p85): Liutprand's reception in Constantinople and treatment by Nicephorus
183 (p86): Shoddy imperialism
186 (p87): Some prophecies and their interpretations
188 (p88): Liutprand's farewell to Constantinople
191 (p89): Walther and Hildegund come to an understanding and plan flight
194 (p90): Attila discovers the flight of the hostages
195 (p91): Walther dispatches the third of his opponents in the Vosges
196 (p92): The battle continues:the hero is compared to a bear amid dogs
197 (p93): A brave Saxon leads his countrymen to victory
199 (p94): Shrewd methods of petty warfare
200 (p95): A fire test convinces the Danes
201 (p96): Verdun in the tenth century
204 (p97): A hard journey(from Rheims to Chartres)in pursuit of learning
211 (p98): Dulcitius
222 (p99): A Mystery play of the Resurrection
228 (p100): A Miracle play,introducing Saint Nicholas
233 (p101): Come,Holy Spirit
237 (p102): Three friends and a telltale
242 (p103): Notker's encounter with the Devil
244 (p104): Heribald and the Hungarian invasion
249 (p105): The duchess Hadwig at her morning lesson with Ekkehart
252 (p106): The Norsemen discover America
256 (p107): Selections from the life of Alexander the Great
261 (p108): Some of the marvels said to have been seen by Alexander
264 (p109): Modus Ottinc('The Otto Melody')
267 (p110): Lament for the death of Henry II
269 (p111): A clever liar
271 (p112): The bishop and the braggart
272 (p113): The lazy abbot
274 (p114): The priest and the wolf
277 (p115): A song for summer
278 (p116): The nightingale
282 (p117): Abelard relates the story of his passion and the self-sacrificing devotion of Hélo?se
289 (p118): Heloise voices her sympathy and love,and appeals for letters
295 (p119): The magnanimity of William Rufus
297 (p120): Other examples of the king's magnanimity
300 (p121): The beginning of"wassail" in England
301 (p122): The coronation of King Arthur
303 (p123): The coronation games and sports
306 (p124): Pope Urban II exhorts the Council of Clermont to the crusade
312 (p125): "O Sacred Head,now wounded"
315 (p126): This fleeting world,the Judgment,Heaven,Hell,warnings,and exhortations
321 (p127): The Golden Age has passed away
323 (p128): The discovery of the holy spear
330 (p129): The virtue of the holy spear is attested
336 (p130): The crusaders capture Jerusalem
348 (p131): A riot at Oxford
351 (p132): The aftermath of the riot
353 (p133): The king speaks harshly to Leicester
356 (p134): The passion of the Saviour
358 (p135): The four grounds of error
359 (p136): The importance of language study
363 (p137): The Mother of Christ beside the Cross
367 (p138): The Day of Judgment
371 (p139): The Goliards,or wandering students
374 (p140): The coming of spring
374 (p141): An invitation
374 (p142): At the tavern
377 (p143): The song of the topers
378 (p144): A riddle
379 (p145): The lament of the roast swan
379 (p146): Fickle Fortune
380 (p147): This vain world
381 (p148): Sweets to the sweet
382 (p149): In praise of wine
384 (p150): The apocalypse of Bishop Golias
387 (p151): Golias curses the thief of his purse
388 (p152): Dialogue between water and wine
391 (p153): Dialogue between the body and the soul
398 (p154): "Sir Penny"
400 (p155): A Knight Templar faithful unto death
401 (p156): Royal ways and royal sayings
404 (p157): Burnellus arrives in Paris and joins the University
407 (p158): Burnellus bemoans his incapacity for learning
410 (p159): The hill of ambition
415 (p160): Address to"Nature"
417 (p161): "A friend in need is a friend indeed"
419 (p162): A story-teller's ruse
420 (p163): A new use for the gold-brick game
424 (p164): "Penny wise and pound foolish"
425 (p165): An overconfident astrologer
426 (p166): Wolfish logic
427 (p167): A spoiled horse
428 (p168): An ancient saying illustrated
429 (p169): Peeps behind the veil of Providence
433 (p170): A presumptuous emperor learns a bitter lesson
440 (p171): A shrewd king
443 (p172): "The Lady of Comfort"
448 (p173): Apollonius escapes shipwreck and is befriended by a fisherman
449 (p174): Apollonius falls in with King Archistrates and wins his favor
450 (p175): Archistrates invites Apollonius to dinner
453 (p176): Three suitors and the mind of a princess
457 (p177): Apollonius intrusts his infant daughter to foster-parents
457 (p178): Tharsia narrowly escapes being murdered,but is kidnapped by pirates
461 (p179): Apollonius finds his wife in the temple of Diana at Ephesus
463 (p180): Apollonius goes to Tarsus and avenges the wrong done to his daughter
464 (p181): The story ends happily for all
466 (p182): The story begins
466 (p183): Astrology brings complications
467 (p184): The queen's second story:the witch and the spring
469 (p185): The story of the third wise man:the dog
470 (p186): King Dolopathos
470 (p187): The palace and its glories at Palermo
471 (p188): The.birth of Prince Lucinius
472 (p189): Lucinius is entrusted to the tutelage of Vergil
472 (p190): Lucinius tells Vergil how astrology made him swoon away
473 (p191): Lucinius promises not to speak,for a season
473 (p192): Lucinius enters Palermo in splendor
474 (p193): Dolopathos in vain begs Lucinius to break his silence
474 (p194): Lucinius,falsely charged with a heinous crime,continues to keep silence
475 (p195): The plan to burn Lucinius alive is interrupted
477 (p196): The story of the first wise man:the faithful dog
482 (p197): The story of the second wise man:the treasure and the thief
491 (p198): Barlaam and Josaphat
508 (p199): The two blind men
509 (p200): "Farmer Hayseed" goes to the city
509 (p201): A nobleman and his three sons
510 (p202): A wise slave
511 (p203): Norfolk and its folks
514 (p204): Mice in council
514 (p205): The stupid men of Willebeg
516 (p206): The glass blower's son
519 (p207): The Antiphonetes
540 (p208): St.William heals a poor woman's hog
541 (p209): A strange remedy and how its neglect meant death to William the sacrist
545 (p210): A cruel punishment and a miraculous healing
546 (p211): A perilous adventure and a marvelous rescue
548 (p212): The schoolboy and the Devil
549 (p213): The usurious woman
551 (p214): A son converts his father
552 (p215): Universal peace the ideal state for the world
555 (p216): A pastoral
560 (p217): Petrarch writes a letter to Cicero
564 (p218): Petrarch describes his manner of life at Vaucluse
568 (p219): On traducers and calumniators:the fable of the rustics and donkey
569 (p220): The victorious Masinissa meets the beautiful Sophonisba
575 (p221): Aeneas travels in England and Scotland,with many adventures
582 (p222): Hymn to Eternity
584 (p223): Galatea
587 (p224): Cleopatra
590 (p225): A tempting invitation
594 (p226): To his thrush
594 (p227): Drown care in wine
596 (p228): De honesto amore et felici eius exitu
603 (p229): Galatea
608 (p230): Folly is universal and has many types
610 (p231): Even those who profess wisdom have their follies
612 (p232): A dialogue on early rising
619 (p233): The state of learning in England
621 (p234): Croeso,Crasso ditior
623 (p235): The Utopians scorn great wealth,dice-playing,and hunting
626 (p236): A lover who cannot"eat his cake and have it too"
627 (p237): The lark in the opening spring(Ioannes Stigelius)
628 (p238): A paradox explained(Ioannes Posthius)
628 (p239): Why a maiden looks at a youth(Sebastianus Schefferus)
629 (p240): To Rosina(Paulus Melissus)
629 (p241): A complaint to Sophy's turtledove(Tobias Scultetus)
630 (p242): An invitation to a banquet in a suburban garden(Michael Haslobius)
631 (p243): Suitable requests for prayer(Georgius Fabricius)
632 (p244): A clear conscience is the best protection(Henricus Decimator)
634 (p245): Gaudium bonae mentis
637 (p246): The prodigal son receives his portion and says farewell
640 (p247): The prodigal meets'Spendthrift' and'Glutton,' and becomes their victim
644 (p248): After his"riotous living" the prodigal soliloquizes
646 (p249): The prodigal returns home to his father
650 (p250): Muretus delivers an encomium on literature
660 (p251): A defense of literature against its detractors
665 (p252): The power of poetry
667 (p253): A plea for Greek and Latin
674 (p254): The praise and prayer of a happy life
675 (p255): Literary and political gossip
676 (p256): Lipsius at home,in his garden
680 (p257): A Jonah of the sixteenth century
688 (p258): An artificial apple serves as a text for philosophical discussion
690 (p259): The shrewdness and other virtues of the louse
695 (p260): The atmosphere for poesy
6 (p2): St.Martin surprises his enemies by an exhibition of miraculous power
9 (p3): Attila,king of the Huns
10 (p4): Attila invades Italy,but is halted by Pope Leo
12 (p5): The death of Attila
14 (p6): The panegyrist compares Theodoric and Alexander the Great
17 (p7): Food-hoarding in the fifth century
18 (p8): A sacristan's adventure with the barbarians
22 (p9): Paradise
23 (p10): The jealousy of the serpent
26 (p11): Gregory explains why he undertakes to write history
27 (p12): Gregory confesses his faith and deplores his ignorance
27 (p13): The founding of Lyons
28 (p14): Attila and the Huns,invading Gaul,are checked at Orleans,and defeated near Chalons-sur-Marne by Aetius
30 (p15): Clovis,king of the Franks,defeats the Alamanni and accepts Christianity,the faith of his queen,Clotilda
32 (p16): Clovis defeats Alaric II and the Visigoths at Vouillé
34 (p17): Clovis by scheming adds the kingdom of Sigibert to his own
36 (p18): Chilperic's legates return from the East
37 (p19): Death of King Chilperic;his character
39 (p20): Beginning of a feud between two families of Tours
42 (p21): The burning of Paris
44 (p22): Temptations of recluses
46 (p23): Outcome of the feud at Tours;death of Sichar
47 (p24): Pope Gregory chosen
51 (p25): Ammonius falls from a height over a precipice
52 (p26): A thief,hanged,but saved by Saint Martin
53 (p27): The boy and the grapes
54 (p28): A beeswax story
57 (p29): Fortunatus sends flowers to Radegunda
59 (p30): He sends a basket of chestnuts
59 (p31): Fortunatus sends thanks to St.Agnes and Radegunda for dainties
60 (p32): Verses penned to Saint Agnes and Radegunda towards the end of a banquet
60 (p33): The triumph of the Cross
62 (p34): The Sacred Tree
64 (p35): Heraclius,his rise to power,his methods,his character
66 (p36): The Saracens and their conquests
70 (p37): To the Empress Constantina Augusta,with reference to relics
75 (p38): Night
76 (p39): Glass
81 (p40): The martyrdom of Saint Alban
85 (p41): How Christian missionaries came to be sent to Britain
86 (p42): Caedmon and his gift of poesy
88 (p43): An example of monastic asceticism
89 (p44): The martyrdom of the holy innocents
92 (p45): Charlemagne discovers the character of the Germans
94 (p46): How Charlemagne brought up his children
96 (p47): Charlemagne's physique,exercise,bathing
97 (p48): His habits in daily life
98 (p49): His studies and educational ambitions
98 (p50): His devotion to the church
103 (p51): The seven sleepers
104 (p52): The Maelstrom
105 (p53): King Alboin makes alliance with the Huns and defeats the Gepidae
107 (p54): How the Langobards were invited to settle in Italy
108 (p55): A fatal jest
109 (p56): Tiberius Constantinus becomes fiftieth emperor of Rome and finds the treasure of Narses
111 (p57): A royal wooing
113 (p58): Paulus digresses from history to relate a remarkable tale
115 (p59): Paulus discusses his own genealogy
117 (p60): A tyrannous duke and how a joke was played on him
119 (p61): In praise of Lake Como
121 (p62): Paulus disclaims profound linguistic learning,but knows a little Greek
124 (p63): De puero qui in glacie extinctus est
124 (p64): An epitaph for the tomb of the poet Fortunatus
125 (p65): The fable of the sick lion
127 (p66): The calf and the stork
127 (p67): The gout and the flea
130 (p68): Conflictus veris et hiemis
133 (p69): De libris quos legere solebam el qualiter fabulae poetarum a philosophis mystice pertractentur
136 (p70): The siege of Barcelona
141 (p71): A prayer
142 (p72): On horticulture
143 (p73): Lilies
146 (p74): The divisions of nature
147 (p75): An elusive category
152 (p76): Reynard takes Isengrim fishing
160 (p77): How to be a just judge
162 (p78): A sequence on the birthday of the martyr St.Laurence
164 (p79): The story of the martyrdom of Saint Laurence
170 (p80): A joking emperor and a shrewd soldier
172 (p81): Conrad I dies and orders the succession
173 (p82): The assassination of King Berengarius I
176 (p83): The imperial palace at Constantinople and what happened there to the emperor Romanus I
177 (p84): Liutprand as envoy of Berengarius II is received in the palatial"Magnaura" at Constantinople
179 (p85): Liutprand's reception in Constantinople and treatment by Nicephorus
183 (p86): Shoddy imperialism
186 (p87): Some prophecies and their interpretations
188 (p88): Liutprand's farewell to Constantinople
191 (p89): Walther and Hildegund come to an understanding and plan flight
194 (p90): Attila discovers the flight of the hostages
195 (p91): Walther dispatches the third of his opponents in the Vosges
196 (p92): The battle continues:the hero is compared to a bear amid dogs
197 (p93): A brave Saxon leads his countrymen to victory
199 (p94): Shrewd methods of petty warfare
200 (p95): A fire test convinces the Danes
201 (p96): Verdun in the tenth century
204 (p97): A hard journey(from Rheims to Chartres)in pursuit of learning
211 (p98): Dulcitius
222 (p99): A Mystery play of the Resurrection
228 (p100): A Miracle play,introducing Saint Nicholas
233 (p101): Come,Holy Spirit
237 (p102): Three friends and a telltale
242 (p103): Notker's encounter with the Devil
244 (p104): Heribald and the Hungarian invasion
249 (p105): The duchess Hadwig at her morning lesson with Ekkehart
252 (p106): The Norsemen discover America
256 (p107): Selections from the life of Alexander the Great
261 (p108): Some of the marvels said to have been seen by Alexander
264 (p109): Modus Ottinc('The Otto Melody')
267 (p110): Lament for the death of Henry II
269 (p111): A clever liar
271 (p112): The bishop and the braggart
272 (p113): The lazy abbot
274 (p114): The priest and the wolf
277 (p115): A song for summer
278 (p116): The nightingale
282 (p117): Abelard relates the story of his passion and the self-sacrificing devotion of Hélo?se
289 (p118): Heloise voices her sympathy and love,and appeals for letters
295 (p119): The magnanimity of William Rufus
297 (p120): Other examples of the king's magnanimity
300 (p121): The beginning of"wassail" in England
301 (p122): The coronation of King Arthur
303 (p123): The coronation games and sports
306 (p124): Pope Urban II exhorts the Council of Clermont to the crusade
312 (p125): "O Sacred Head,now wounded"
315 (p126): This fleeting world,the Judgment,Heaven,Hell,warnings,and exhortations
321 (p127): The Golden Age has passed away
323 (p128): The discovery of the holy spear
330 (p129): The virtue of the holy spear is attested
336 (p130): The crusaders capture Jerusalem
348 (p131): A riot at Oxford
351 (p132): The aftermath of the riot
353 (p133): The king speaks harshly to Leicester
356 (p134): The passion of the Saviour
358 (p135): The four grounds of error
359 (p136): The importance of language study
363 (p137): The Mother of Christ beside the Cross
367 (p138): The Day of Judgment
371 (p139): The Goliards,or wandering students
374 (p140): The coming of spring
374 (p141): An invitation
374 (p142): At the tavern
377 (p143): The song of the topers
378 (p144): A riddle
379 (p145): The lament of the roast swan
379 (p146): Fickle Fortune
380 (p147): This vain world
381 (p148): Sweets to the sweet
382 (p149): In praise of wine
384 (p150): The apocalypse of Bishop Golias
387 (p151): Golias curses the thief of his purse
388 (p152): Dialogue between water and wine
391 (p153): Dialogue between the body and the soul
398 (p154): "Sir Penny"
400 (p155): A Knight Templar faithful unto death
401 (p156): Royal ways and royal sayings
404 (p157): Burnellus arrives in Paris and joins the University
407 (p158): Burnellus bemoans his incapacity for learning
410 (p159): The hill of ambition
415 (p160): Address to"Nature"
417 (p161): "A friend in need is a friend indeed"
419 (p162): A story-teller's ruse
420 (p163): A new use for the gold-brick game
424 (p164): "Penny wise and pound foolish"
425 (p165): An overconfident astrologer
426 (p166): Wolfish logic
427 (p167): A spoiled horse
428 (p168): An ancient saying illustrated
429 (p169): Peeps behind the veil of Providence
433 (p170): A presumptuous emperor learns a bitter lesson
440 (p171): A shrewd king
443 (p172): "The Lady of Comfort"
448 (p173): Apollonius escapes shipwreck and is befriended by a fisherman
449 (p174): Apollonius falls in with King Archistrates and wins his favor
450 (p175): Archistrates invites Apollonius to dinner
453 (p176): Three suitors and the mind of a princess
457 (p177): Apollonius intrusts his infant daughter to foster-parents
457 (p178): Tharsia narrowly escapes being murdered,but is kidnapped by pirates
461 (p179): Apollonius finds his wife in the temple of Diana at Ephesus
463 (p180): Apollonius goes to Tarsus and avenges the wrong done to his daughter
464 (p181): The story ends happily for all
466 (p182): The story begins
466 (p183): Astrology brings complications
467 (p184): The queen's second story:the witch and the spring
469 (p185): The story of the third wise man:the dog
470 (p186): King Dolopathos
470 (p187): The palace and its glories at Palermo
471 (p188): The.birth of Prince Lucinius
472 (p189): Lucinius is entrusted to the tutelage of Vergil
472 (p190): Lucinius tells Vergil how astrology made him swoon away
473 (p191): Lucinius promises not to speak,for a season
473 (p192): Lucinius enters Palermo in splendor
474 (p193): Dolopathos in vain begs Lucinius to break his silence
474 (p194): Lucinius,falsely charged with a heinous crime,continues to keep silence
475 (p195): The plan to burn Lucinius alive is interrupted
477 (p196): The story of the first wise man:the faithful dog
482 (p197): The story of the second wise man:the treasure and the thief
491 (p198): Barlaam and Josaphat
508 (p199): The two blind men
509 (p200): "Farmer Hayseed" goes to the city
509 (p201): A nobleman and his three sons
510 (p202): A wise slave
511 (p203): Norfolk and its folks
514 (p204): Mice in council
514 (p205): The stupid men of Willebeg
516 (p206): The glass blower's son
519 (p207): The Antiphonetes
540 (p208): St.William heals a poor woman's hog
541 (p209): A strange remedy and how its neglect meant death to William the sacrist
545 (p210): A cruel punishment and a miraculous healing
546 (p211): A perilous adventure and a marvelous rescue
548 (p212): The schoolboy and the Devil
549 (p213): The usurious woman
551 (p214): A son converts his father
552 (p215): Universal peace the ideal state for the world
555 (p216): A pastoral
560 (p217): Petrarch writes a letter to Cicero
564 (p218): Petrarch describes his manner of life at Vaucluse
568 (p219): On traducers and calumniators:the fable of the rustics and donkey
569 (p220): The victorious Masinissa meets the beautiful Sophonisba
575 (p221): Aeneas travels in England and Scotland,with many adventures
582 (p222): Hymn to Eternity
584 (p223): Galatea
587 (p224): Cleopatra
590 (p225): A tempting invitation
594 (p226): To his thrush
594 (p227): Drown care in wine
596 (p228): De honesto amore et felici eius exitu
603 (p229): Galatea
608 (p230): Folly is universal and has many types
610 (p231): Even those who profess wisdom have their follies
612 (p232): A dialogue on early rising
619 (p233): The state of learning in England
621 (p234): Croeso,Crasso ditior
623 (p235): The Utopians scorn great wealth,dice-playing,and hunting
626 (p236): A lover who cannot"eat his cake and have it too"
627 (p237): The lark in the opening spring(Ioannes Stigelius)
628 (p238): A paradox explained(Ioannes Posthius)
628 (p239): Why a maiden looks at a youth(Sebastianus Schefferus)
629 (p240): To Rosina(Paulus Melissus)
629 (p241): A complaint to Sophy's turtledove(Tobias Scultetus)
630 (p242): An invitation to a banquet in a suburban garden(Michael Haslobius)
631 (p243): Suitable requests for prayer(Georgius Fabricius)
632 (p244): A clear conscience is the best protection(Henricus Decimator)
634 (p245): Gaudium bonae mentis
637 (p246): The prodigal son receives his portion and says farewell
640 (p247): The prodigal meets'Spendthrift' and'Glutton,' and becomes their victim
644 (p248): After his"riotous living" the prodigal soliloquizes
646 (p249): The prodigal returns home to his father
650 (p250): Muretus delivers an encomium on literature
660 (p251): A defense of literature against its detractors
665 (p252): The power of poetry
667 (p253): A plea for Greek and Latin
674 (p254): The praise and prayer of a happy life
675 (p255): Literary and political gossip
676 (p256): Lipsius at home,in his garden
680 (p257): A Jonah of the sixteenth century
688 (p258): An artificial apple serves as a text for philosophical discussion
690 (p259): The shrewdness and other virtues of the louse
695 (p260): The atmosphere for poesy
Alternative description
Aetheria -- Sulpicius Severus -- Iordanes -- Ennodius -- Eugippius -- Avitus -- Gregory Of Tours -- Venantius Fortunatus -- Frédégaire -- Gregory The Great -- Isidore -- Baeda -- Einhard -- Paulus Diaconus -- Alcuin -- Theodulf -- Ermoldus Nigellus -- Hrabanus Maurus -- Walafrid Strabo -- Ioannes Scotus -- Reynard The Fox -- Sedulius Scotus -- Notker Balbulus -- Liutprand -- Ekkehart (waltharii Poesis) -- Widukind -- Richer -- Hrothsvitha -- Mediaevel Religious Drama -- Robert, King Of France -- Ekkehart Iv -- Adam Of Bremen -- Ekkehart Of Aura -- The Cambridge Songs -- Abelard And Héloïse -- William Of Malmesbury -- Geoffrey Of Monmouth -- William Of Tyre -- Bernard Of Clairvaux -- Bernard Of Cluny -- Raymund Of Agiles -- Foucher -- Matthew Paris -- Saint Bonaventura -- Roger Bacon -- Jacopone Da Todi -- Thomas A Celano -- Songs Of The Wandering Students -- The Poems Attributed To Walter Map -- Walter Map -- Nigellus Wireker -- John Of Hauteville (or Hauteseille) -- Alain De Lille -- Petrus Alphonsus -- Jaques De Vitry -- Étienne De Bourbon -- Gesta Romanorum -- The Story Of Apollonius, King Of Tyre -- The Story Of The Seven Wise Men -- Jacob De Voragine -- Wright's Latin Stories -- Odo Of Cerinton (sherrington) -- John The Monk -- Thomas Of Monmouth -- The Passion And Miracles Of St. Olaf -- Caesar Of Heisterbach -- Dante Alighieri -- Petrarch -- Aeneas Silvius -- Marullus -- Bembo -- Baldassare Castiglione -- Marcantonio Flaminio -- Iulius Caesar Scaliger -- Baptista Mantuanus -- Jacopo Sannazaro -- Erasmus -- Sir Thomas More -- Ioannes Secundus -- Sixteenth-century Latin Lyrists In Germany -- Jakob Balde -- Gulielmus Gnapheus -- Muretus -- Iustus Lipsius -- Jean Bodin -- Daniel Heinsius -- John Milton. [edited By] K. P. Harrington.
date open sourced
2024-06-13
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