| François Rabelais - 1807 - 370 pages
...exercise, may well do ; which, although at the beginning seemed difficult, became a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a king, than the study of a scholar. Nevertheless, Ponocrates, to divert Axungia ab ungtiendo platalri are, faciliorem cireumaclam rotarum.... | |
| François Rabelais - 1883 - 330 pages
...discipline well continued. Which, although at the beginning it seemed difficult, became a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a king than the study of a scholar. Nevertheless Ponocrates, to divert him from this vehement intension * Of his age. It appears before,... | |
| François Rabelais, Walter Besant, Sir Walter Besant - 1883 - 410 pages
...so continued, may do. Which, although at the beginning it seemed difficult, became a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a king than the study of a scholar. Nevertheless Ponocrates, to divert him from this vehement intention of spirit, thought fit, once in... | |
| Robert Hebert Quick - 1890 - 612 pages
...French rondeaux. This course of study, " although at first it seemed difficult, yet soon became so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a king than the study of a scholar." Training the body. In preferring, the Quadrivial studies to the Trivial, and still more in his use... | |
| François Rabelais - 1893 - 694 pages
...the Beginning it seemed difficult, as it went on was so sweet, easy and delectable that it resembled rather the Recreation of a King than the Study of a Scholar. Nevertheless Ponocrates, to give him Rest from this vehment Intention of the Spirits, marked out once... | |
| François Rabelais - 1893 - 690 pages
...the Beginning it seemed difficult, as it went on was so sweet, easy and delectable that it resembled rather the Recreation of a King than the Study of a Scholar. Nevertheless Ponocrates, to give him Rest from this vehment Intention of the Spirits, marked out once... | |
| United States. Office of Education - 1894 - 672 pages
...exercises, may well do, which, though at the beginning seemed difficult, l>ec:ime a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful that it seemed rather...their practical application was concerned, but in tbe essays of Montaigne, published a few years after, we find many of them divested of the filth with... | |
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1894 - 676 pages
...delightful that it seemed rallier the recreation of a king than the study of a scholar. MONTAHiNE'S ESSAYS. Babelais's ideas on education bore little...essays of Montaigne, published a few years after, we find many of them divested of the tilth with which liabelais overwhelmed them, and placed in surnot... | |
| Hubert Marshall Skinner - 1894 - 604 pages
...exercise may well do ; which, although at the beginning it seemed difficult, became a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a King than the study of a scholar. tension of the spirits, thought fit once in a month, 1 upon some fair and clear day, to go out in the... | |
| Charles Dudley Warner, Hamilton Wright Mabie, Lucia Isabella Gilbert Runkle, George H. Warner, Edward Cornelius Towne, George Henry Warner - 1897 - 676 pages
...so continued, may do. Which, although at the beginning it seemed difficult, became a little after so sweet, so easy, and so delightful, that it seemed...recreation of a king than the study of a scholar. Nevertheless, Ponocrates, to divert him from this vehement intention of spirit, thought fit, once in... | |
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