How to earn the merit grant, an elementary manual of school management, Volume 21883 |
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Page 139
... kings , but of the English people . ( 3 ) Manners and customs , dress , industries , the condi- tion of the country and people , institution of laws , and biographies of great and good men , are of more importance than the birth and ...
... kings , but of the English people . ( 3 ) Manners and customs , dress , industries , the condi- tion of the country and people , institution of laws , and biographies of great and good men , are of more importance than the birth and ...
Page 144
... king . H. M. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS . Two hosts are met on battle plain , Beside " the silver sea , " To pour their blood , like summer rain , In deadly rivalry . The morn shines bright , the waters gleam , The tide of war rolls by ...
... king . H. M. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS . Two hosts are met on battle plain , Beside " the silver sea , " To pour their blood , like summer rain , In deadly rivalry . The morn shines bright , the waters gleam , The tide of war rolls by ...
Page 145
... king , By deadly arrow struck , The centre of a warrior ring , Withstands the battle shock . But faint with loss of blood , and spent With changing blows , his gaze To native earth and sky is bent , Beneath the sun's last rays . L The ...
... king , By deadly arrow struck , The centre of a warrior ring , Withstands the battle shock . But faint with loss of blood , and spent With changing blows , his gaze To native earth and sky is bent , Beneath the sun's last rays . L The ...
Page 171
... kings ; but in 1213 , at the battle of Damme , the first flash of naval prowess bursts forth , in which English sailors win the day . From 1485-1688 .— ( 1 ) In this period take note of the increasing tyranny of the crown , Tudor and ...
... kings ; but in 1213 , at the battle of Damme , the first flash of naval prowess bursts forth , in which English sailors win the day . From 1485-1688 .— ( 1 ) In this period take note of the increasing tyranny of the crown , Tudor and ...
Page 174
... King . He was considered as one of the people , and chosen on account of his fitness for office ; but the royal authority seems to have been confined to the royal race . The title of queen was conferred upon the king's wife , till ...
... King . He was considered as one of the people , and chosen on account of his fitness for office ; but the royal authority seems to have been confined to the royal race . The title of queen was conferred upon the king's wife , till ...
Common terms and phrases
adjective attendance avoirdupois blackboard boys Britons child class subjects Code cotton desks dictation dictation exercises difficult divided division Edition Elementary England English examination examples exercise explained expression F. A. Paley Fcap Geography Gibraltar girls give given Grammar H.M.'S INSPECTORS hand Head Teacher hundred illustrate inches square Instructions to Inspectors intelligence John Milton king Lake land long division meaning Melbourne Mental Arithmetic method miles Milton mountain multiply names Norman NOTES OF LESSON nouns passage phrase piece of calico poetry practice pronouns Reader reading lesson reading-books reference rivers round rule Saxon scholars seam sentences Shakespeare shillings sight simple sing slates sol-fa spelling square miles stage Standard II stitch Subject Matter Subtraction syllable taught teacher teaching tion tone tonic sol-fa towns verbs Vulgar Fractions words writing
Popular passages
Page 300 - CROMWELL, our chief of men, who through a cloud Not of war only, but detractions rude, Guided by faith and matchless fortitude, To peace and truth thy glorious way hast ploughed...
Page 298 - What needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones The labour of an age in piled stones ? Or that his hallowed reliques should be hid Under a star-ypointing pyramid ? Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What needst thou such weak witness of thy name ? Thou in our wonder and astonishment Hast built thyself a livelong monument.
Page 293 - ... supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blank verse as the best of you; and being an absolute Johannes factotum, is in his own conceit the only Shake-scene in a country.