God", for the smallest sums of money ; and to this it may be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the lower orders of the English, that may not be atoned for by money. Works of the Camden Society - Page 261847Full view - About this book
| Frederick James Furnivall - Education - 1868 - 750 pages
...almost " for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money ; and to this it may bo attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English, that may not be atoned for by money. — A Relation of the Island of England (Camden Society, 1847), pp. 24-6. "This evidently refers to... | |
| James Franck Bright - Great Britain - 1876 - 532 pages
...asking, almost for the love of God, the smallest snm of money, and to this it may be attributed that there is no injury that can be committed against the lower orders which may not be atoned for by money."— /(. Rel. p. 26. See also the description of the mercenary... | |
| James Franck Bright - Great Britain - 1878 - 520 pages
...asking, almost for the love of God, the smallest sum of money, and to this it may be attributed that there is no injury that can be committed against the lower orders which may not be atoned for by money." — It. Rel. p. 26, See also the description of the mercenary... | |
| Alice Stopford Green - Cities and towns - 1893 - 468 pages
...almost ' for the love of God,' for the smallest sums of money; and to this it may be attributed that there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English that may not be atoned for by money." 2 But if apprenticeship ever brought with it " pride of clothing," the poor working class of the towns... | |
| Charles William Colby - Great Britain - 1899 - 378 pages
...almost " for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money ; and to this it may be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English, that may not be atoned for by money. 51. JOHN CABOT'S FIRST VOYAGE (1497). Soucino was the representative in England of Ludovico Sforza,... | |
| Charles William Colby - Great Britain - 1899 - 398 pages
...almost " for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money ; and to this it may be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English, that may not be atoned for by money. 51. JOHN CABOT'S FIRST VOYAGE (1497). Soncino was the representative in England of Ludovico Sfor/a,... | |
| John Milton Berdan - English poetry - 1920 - 602 pages
...almost "for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money; and to this it can be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English, that may not be atoned for by money. Such is the way the English "home" of the sixteenth century appeared to an intelligent Italian. Naturally... | |
| Robert Burns Morgan - Great Britain - 1923 - 696 pages
...almost " for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money ; and to this it may be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...but above all, those who happen to be in the good grace of the mistress of the house in which they are domiciliated at the time of the death of the master... | |
| Aurelius Cornelis Gerard Pompen - Comparative literature - 1925 - 382 pages
...Association, vol. 27 (1895), 443. 6 The contemporary writer of the ' Italian Relation ' also noticed ' there is no injury that can be committed against the...the English, that may not be atoned for by money.' — Quotation in AF Pollard ii, 222. • See quotations in NED. The following stanza adds something... | |
| Leonard R. N. Ashley - History - 1988 - 330 pages
...almost "for the love of God," for the smallest sums of money; and to (his it may be attributed, that there is no injury that can be committed against the...of the English that may not be atoned for by money. (That Italian Relation of England lies outside the time-frame of this book, but I should like to recommend... | |
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