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"goodly" Definitions
  1. (old-fashioned, formal) quite large in size or amount
  2. (old use) physically attractive; of good quality
"goodly" Synonyms
considerable substantial biggish largish sizeable tidy handsome significant large respectable sizable decent decent-sized big boxcar bulky generous good grand great attractive good-looking comely aesthetic(UK) beauteous beautiful bonnie bonny cute drop-dead esthetic(US) fair fetching fine gorgeous knockout likely lovely appreciable perceptible noticeable obvious detectable visible discernible evident marked palpable apparent recognisable(UK) recognizable(US) abundant comfortable worthwhile middling acceptable passable reasonable glorious wonderful splendid excellent magnificent fantastic superb marvelous(US) marvellous(UK) fabulous brilliant terrific awesome sensational amazing sublime heavenly excellently exceptionally appealingly delightfully enjoyably greatly likeably(UK) likably(US) marvellously(UK) marvelously(US) nicely pleasantly positively satisfactorily satisfyingly superbly wonderfully acceptably agreeably beautifully perfectly faultlessly flawlessly immaculately impeccably sublimely indefectibly purely splendidly spotlessly stainlessly supremely unblemishedly untaintedly valuably fancily hotly invaluably righteously dignifiedly equitably honestly honorably(US) honourably(UK) justly morally nobly respectably virtuously admirably ethically exemplarily godlily incorruptibly laudably loftily meritoriously ably adeptly capably competently giftedly proficiently quickly skilfully(UK) skillfully(US) talentedly accurately cleverly dexterously(US) dextrously(UK) efficiently masterfully properly reliably suitably effectively helpfully advantageously beneficially constructively productively profitably appropriately conveniently decently desirably favorably(US) favourably(UK) fittingly fruitfully usably consumably dedicatedly devotedly loyally staunchly dependably faithfully inseparably safely stably steadily trustworthily trustily unfailingly unwaveringly closely compellingly constantly convincingly correctly convivially festively jollily merrily cheerfully companionably cordially entertainingly festally friendlily gaily genially happily heartily hilariously hospitably jocundly jovially livelily mirthfully altruistically bigheartedly charitably compassionately generously good-heartedly humanely kindly kindheartedly kind-heartedly magnanimously munificently philanthropically selflessly sympathetically unstintingly beneficently benevolently considerately collectedly commodiously composedly measuredly pacifically providentially soberly blessedly blissfully blithely cheerily chipperly chirpily contently contentedly delightedly ecstatically deliciously appetisingly(UK) appetizingly(US) delectably flavorsomely(US) flavoursomely(UK) palatably scrumptiously succulently sweetly tastily yummily ambrosially flavorfully flavourfully(UK) invitingly lusciously mouth-wateringly piquantly richly authentically genuinely legitimately really truely validly actually credibly creditably indisputably indubitably justifiedly officially originally sterlingly unadulteratedly civilly courteously obediently politely respectfully thoughtfully deferentially acquiescently compliantly dutifully manageably seemlily cooperatively decorously mindfully regardfully tolerantly tractably abundantly considerably largely plentifully significantly sizeably substantially substantively adequately amply astronomically extensively sizably solidly sufficiently superabundantly voluminously appreciably handsomely hugely healthily strongly lustily robustly sturdily salutiferously importantly meaningfully powerfully strikingly tellingly weightily crucially forcefully stylishly contemporarily dapperly dressily fashionably hiply sexily smartly trendily chicly coolly currently dashingly faddily favouredly(UK) formally genteelly inly latestly balmily brightly clemently placidly tranquilly paradisiacally pleasingly relaxingly serenely sunnily temperately warmly calmly cloudlessly relaxedly restfully summerily logically practically rationally sensibly analytically cerebrally certainly circumspectly deductively discerningly infallibly intellectually intelligently justifiably objectively perspicaciously philosophically appreciatively complimentarily laudatorily praisefully admiringly enthusiastically flatteringly supportively adoringly eulogistically panegyrically worshipfully condignly receptively determinedly devoutly fervently passionately resolutely ardently decidedly doggedly earnestly firmly fixedly grittily indomitably obstinately perseveringly persistently purposefully single-mindedly curatively recuperatively refreshingly remedially restoratively therapeutically antidotally antiseptically aseptically correctively healthfully invigoratingly(US) medicinally rehabilitatively restitutively sanitarily soothingly tonically wholesomely More
"goodly" Antonyms
bantam dinky dwarf dwarfish inconsequential inconsiderable insignificant insubstantial little negligible nominal puny shrimpy small smallish undersize undersized paltry diminutive slight grotesque hideous homely ill-favored(US) plain ugly unaesthetic unattractive unbeautiful uncomely uncute unhandsome unlovely unpleasing unpretty unsightly monstrous unappealing unpleasant vile awful dreadful unexceptional ignominious drab stupid bad second-rate unimportant lacklustre(UK) wretched poor horrible execrable lousy terrible lackluster(US) no great shakes alarming frightful shocking appalling outrageous distasteful gruesome lurid mean obscene beastly harrowing lamentable substandard mediocre abysmal atrocious unsatisfactory dismal shoddy deplorable pitiful inadequate egregious dissatisfactory badly deplorably dismally dreadfully detestably disagreeably disgustingly dishearteningly distressingly disturbingly exasperatingly foully frightfully ghastlily gloomily grotesquely hatefully hellishly hideously homelily lousily mediocrely substandardly wretchedly defectively deficiently execrably middlingly valuelessly wantingly abysmally averagely awfully basely characterlessly cheaply colorlessly(US) colourlessly(UK) commonly commonplacely dishonorably(US) dishonourably(UK) disloyally offensively terribly villainously corruptly cruelly deceitfully depravedly dishonestly faithlessly immorally indecently nefariously objectionably pervertedly traitorously treacherously apathetically amateurly clumsily incapably ineffectively powerlessly talentlessly unskillfully untalentedly uselessly weakly awkwardly improperly inaccurately ineffectually inefficiently ineptly unably unacceptably unpreparedly inadequately unsuitably inappropriately inconveniently unfitly unhelpfully unprofitably unreliably detrimentally disadvantageously harmfully inapplicably incompatibly incongruously incorrectly unfittingly brokenly imperfectly incompletely vulnerably distantly unhealthily fakely incompetently filthily selfishly unkindly scantly scantily tightly hard-heartedly parsimoniously pitilessly skimpily stingily unfeelingly evilly sadly dejectedly depressedly despondently bitterly bluely calamitously cheerlessly darkly depressingly desolately despairingly disastrously discomposingly disconsolately discouragingly distastefully grossly grottily horribly horridly horrifically ickily loathsomely nastily nauseatingly obnoxiously repugnantly repulsively artificially deceptively fraudulently untrustworthily falsely invalidly unreally bogusly counterfeitly phonily(US) synthetically unnaturally mischievously naughtily rascally roguishly slily troublesomely vexatiously waywardly archly bothersomely damagingly dangerously deleteriously destructively devilishly diminutively insubstantially insufficiently littly marginally meagerly(US) negligibly nominally bittily meagrely(UK) minutely paltrily pettily picayunely piddlingly poorly punily shortly slightly diseasedly afflictedly infirmly moldily(US) mouldily(UK) nauseously queasily rottenly sickly woozily farcically ignorantly meaninglessly shallowly simply trivially unintelligently cursorily emptily flightily flimsily foolishly frivolously frothily hollowly idly inanely unfashionably antiquatedly datedly dowdily frumpily inelegantly old-fashionedly outmodedly unstylishly bedraggledly casually crummily fadedly grungily ignominiously mangily raggedly scrubbily scruffily lugubriously tenebrously blackly dispiritingly drably drearily grayly(US) greyly(UK) hazily rainily wintrily(US) afflictively bleakly cloudily illogically irrationally senselessly absurdly crazily fallaciously groundlessly implausibly incoherently misguidedly misleadingly nonsensically preposterously thoughtlessly uncompellingly unconvincingly unfoundedly unjustifiedly unreasonably critically disparagingly negatively overcritically scornfully unappreciatively adversely captiously carpingly contemptuously derogatorily disdainfully hypercritically slightingly unfavorably(US) unfavourably(UK) unflatteringly unfriendlily boredly disinterestedly emotionlessly indifferently listlessly unconcernedly unemotionally unenthusiastically uninterestedly unresponsively callously coldly dispiritedly droopily flatly impassively insensibly languidly lazily hurtfully infectiously injuriously insanitarily nocuously perniciously poisonously ruinously toxically unhealthfully unhygienically

273 Sentences With "goodly"

How to use goodly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "goodly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "goodly". Mastering all the usages of "goodly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Goodly is launching out of Y Combinator's summer class this year.
There were oiling rooms specially designed to apply the goodly substance.
"Josh was in tears a goodly amount of the time," Bartlett said.
Here's to your glorious company and goodly fellowship for all of 2017.
Nick Adams, PhD, is a data scientist, sociologist and founder of Goodly Labs.
Goodly co-founder and CEO Greg Poulin knows the student loan crisis personally.
Now, Y Combinator-backed Goodly has raised a $1.3 million seed round led by Norwest.
Goodly said those demonstrators and their cause have become "invisible" following the attack on police.
I just can't," he said, adding, less than do-goodly, "It's really pissing me off.
With the third row deployed, there was a goodly amount of space for my luggage.
With the third row deployed, there was a goodly amount of space for my luggage.
Goodly is a new startup that's looking to help those employers offer that as a benefit.
To all goodly inclined spirits who joined me here, may there be peace and friendship between us.
Poulin and Verma started Goodly to create a "set it and forget it" system that automates everything.
It was rapidly debunked and Whelan was forced to apologize, but a goodly number of conservatives — including Sen.
Ada Goodly, Treasurer of the Louisiana National Lawyers Guild, took down comprehensive declarations from those who were jailed.
Goodly integrates with payroll operations and gives companies and employees a pretty flexible way to set their spending schedule.
Beyond improving talent retention, Goodly may also help erase some of the systematic discrimination against minorities in our country.
If a goodly number of internet-using, middle-class Africans are coming round to gay rights, that is something.
Employees connect their student loans to Goodly, which takes a few minutes to verify them before setting up the contribution plan.
So when employers use Goodly to offer $313 per month in student loan payback for a $231 fee, talent sticks around.
We also enjoyed an abundant house salad to start, with a goodly variety of baby greens and a sherry thyme vinaigrette.
In other words, the trauma of losing one child to adoption deters a goodly percentage of women from ever having another.
Goodly hasn't had a single customer churn since launch, demonstrating how badly employers want to keep job-hopping talent in their roles.
Goodly then brings back detailed reports on the company's implementation to help it better understand whether the policies are working for their employees.
And when the two researchers set traps containing the four chemicals out in the wild, they instantly attracted a goodly haul of Desmometopa.
The 360-degree video is a highlight of the Formula E Buenos Aires race, including all a goodly number of overtakes, crashes, and celebrations.
Rather than help with their monthly payment that includes interest, Goodly clients pay down their employees' core debt so they can escape more quickly.
At the conclusion, in a last-ditch attempt to win over his audience, Daffy swallows gasoline, nitroglycerin, "a goodly amount of gunpowder" and uranium-238.
Recipes in 19th-century cookbooks relied on measurements like a "handful" of rice or a "goodly amount" of molasses — on the assumption that women largely knew how to cook.
Another Yuletide at the door: The wreath left on it since before The Christmas of two-oh-fifteen— A goodly while ago, I mean— Is up to date now once again.
Mr. Brown devotes a goodly number of diary entries to his professional shortcomings: his failure to specialize as a writer, his lifelong aversion to risk (why didn't he write a novel?).
A goodly number of those senators are presidential hopefuls, leaving their prospective campaigns open to attack from Republicans salivating to capitalize on an idea that has historically been a political graveyard.
And although the pound's swoon stoked inflation, while failing to generate the export boom that some had expected, Britain continued to attract a goodly share of foreign investment and unemployment kept falling.
Perks for employees are becoming a big business in the tight labor market and Goodly wants to make one of the most important perks — student loan repayment — easy and accessible for employers.
This exhibition of American art (wonderfully defined, since a goodly number of the artists are immigrants) in Northwest Arkansas encompasses a broad reach of America, not a skewed, bi-coastal version of it.
Letters To the Editor: Now that President-elect Donald Trump has abandoned, modified or finessed a goodly number of his campaign promises, it's time for him to reconsider his opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
The 66th Winter Show, located in the Park Avenue Armory, has size on its side — the large but not too large Wade Thompson Drill Hall — along with a goodly amount of quality from 72 exhibitors.
"I am aware that there are a goodly number of my Hartford friends and others who are anxious to see how the colored artist will make out," Porter wrote to Twain from Paris in 1883.
To imagine lifestyle choices making a substantial dent in global warming is to imagine a goodly portion of the world's rich people voluntarily living a lifestyle that is relatively ascetic even by US middle-class standards.
Between the Toki machines and the bars that craft a Japanese-style whisky highball by hand, it is now possible to execute a quality highball bar crawl across a goodly portion of the contiguous United States.
With a goodly crowd of German media in attendance, Mr. Wenders, 71, said he was "flabbergasted" by Mr. Ramirez's work as a meeting of painting and film, something that the German director said had long fascinated him.
And while Hanukkah has dreidels and latkes and a goodly amount of fun, the celebration's underpinnings just don't strike the same sort of jolly chord, one that viewers want to return to (and pay for) season after season.
As a minuscule country that for a few shining centuries — rather like Britain, six hundred years later — expanded and held sway around a goodly part of the globe, from Vietnam, Burma and China to Hungary, Thrace and Poland.
Balling that up, from the above chart we can deduce that Carbon Black is growing at a goodly clip from a revenue base over the $2100 million mark, with steadily rising operating losses (speaking loosely) and high sales and marketing costs.
I was raised in one of the city's drowsier corners, near enough, via my parents' white Corolla, to goodly expanses of both bushland and beach, where the air smelled of exactly five things on rotation (Banana Boat sunscreen, mildewed neoprene, frangipani, eucalypt, vinegar-doused fries).
It stands to reason that some of these would be some George Lucas-ass names, and as it turns out a goodly number of them are; someone named Skye Bolt was drafted in 220, for instance, and someone named Logan Ice was picked in 13.
Which means that over the course of our galaxy's lifetime so far, little Oumuamua might have cruised through some 20,000 star systems — a small fraction of the 200 billion stars in the galaxy, but still a goodly number of stamps on its cosmic passport.
Goodly: Read the application form that got a company with $0 in the bank into the selective startup accelerator that launched Airbnb and DropboxInEvent: The startup accelerator that launched Airbnb and Dropbox rejected 3 founders in 2015 — so they rewrote their application and tried again.
She directs a goodly portion of her wrath at the American candy store of quackeries: the "mindfulness" industry; Silicon Valley-style "biohacks" meant to engineer immortality; integrative holistic health; the mania for fitness (even though the author admits to being something of a gym rat herself).
It is no exaggeration to say that a goodly portion of planet Earth's most famous residents have gathered today at Longcross Studios outside London to shoot a scene set at Stamboul (now Istanbul) train station for director Sir Kenneth Branagh's adaptation of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express (out Nov. 22).
Sadly, it seems like this time around the agitators are using innocent, goodly ice cream as their medium for unfounded distress, and there's no way in hell we're going to stand by and let anybody besmirch that nectar of the gods that is ice cream, especially if the story is a hoax.
Students would have to be "wearing blinders" not to see that a "goodly number of law school graduates toil (perhaps part time) in drudgery or have less than hugely successful careers," Justice Melvin L. Schweitzer of New York Supreme Court wrote in 2012, dismissing a lawsuit by nine former students against New York Law School.
Students would have to be "wearing blinders" not to see that a "goodly number of law school graduates toil (perhaps part time) in drudgery or have less than hugely successful careers," Justice Melvin L. Schweitzer of New York Supreme Court wrote in 2012, dismissing a lawsuit by nine former students against New York School of Law.
She observes cannily that "among the mother writers of today probably two of the most distinguished are Karl Ove Knausgaard and, in his way, Louis C.K." I have often thought (perhaps cynically) that male writers have more literary freedom to detail 21st-​­century parental domestic life, and only when a goodly number of men are stay-at-home parents will this country ever pass laws about universal pre-K.
I have of late, (but wherefore I know not) lost all my mirth, forgone all custom of exercises; and indeed, it goes so heavily with my disposition; that this goodly frame the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory; this most excellent canopy the air, look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof, fretted with golden fire: why, it appeareth no other thing to me, than a foul and pestilent congregation of vapours.
275 described Guildford as "a comely, virtuous and goodly gentleman".Ives 2009 p.
The needlewoman's workbasket holds further associations with home, hearth, mothering and goodly housewifery.
Bernier told this ensample that teacheth so goodly matter, and of it he made what he might.
This was the holy man who first gave this goodly creature of the popeship to the world.
Goodly Rath as Judge in the Odia Singing Reality Show Singing SuperStar Goodly Rath, also spelled Goodli, is an Indian film composer, musician, and singer. His range of work includes playback singing, vocal arrangements, musical arrangements, background scores, music programming, production. His unique style and musical enthusiasm has attracted various collaborations with many leading producers.
The 16th-century writer Sampson Erdeswicke wrote: "Throwley is a fair, ancient house, and goodly demesne; being the seat of the Meverells, a very ancient house of gentlemen and of goodly living, equalling the best sort of gentlemen in the Shire."S. C. Hall. "Throwley Hall" in The Baronial Halls of England Volume I. 1858. Oliver de Meverell was settled here by 1203.
Sir Anthony or Antony Standen (b. c. 1548 - d. ?) English spy or intelligencer. Standen was a "goodly tall fair man with flaxen hair and beard".
Diana Dekker. "A Lively Place." The Dominion Post, 14 August 1999. She also wrote a history of the church (St Mary's Church), called Goodly Stones and Timbers, in 1988.
The Goodly Word: The Puritan Influence in America Literature. Clements Publishing. p. 138.Seligman, Edwin Robert Anderson; Johnson, Alvin Saunders, eds (1937). Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences. p. 12.
The name "Taybeh" means "The goodly". According to local tradition, Saladin met a delegation of Aphram inhabitants during his wars against Crusaders. Impressed by the hospitality of the locals, he named the village Taybeh, or "goodly" in Arabic.CNEWA Another version of the story is that he was charmed by their goodness and the beauty of their faces, ordering the village to be renamed Tayyibat al-Isem ("beautiful of name") instead of what sounded like Afra ("full of dust").
Aaron Moses states (l.c. p. 46a) that he was the author also of a commentary on the Midrash Tanḥuma, entitled "Zebed Ṭob" (A Goodly Gift). This has not been printed.Ginzberg, Louis (1901).
Louise Clarke Pyrnelle (June 19, 1850 – August 26, 1907) was an Alabama writer.This Goodly Land Author Information for Louise Clarke Pyrnelle Her works drew heavily from her childhood experiences growing up on an antebellum plantation.
Taibe (; ), meaning "The goodly",Palmer, 1881, p.167 is a Muslim Arab village in northeastern Israel. Located in the Jezreel Valley, it falls under the jurisdiction of Gilboa Regional Council. In it had a population of .
Bless me, what a fry of fornication is at door! On > my Christian conscience, this one christening will beget a thousand; here > will be father, godfather, and all together." Gorges wrote that he obtained Epenow from Captain Henry Harley, although he denied knowing how Harley got him, except that Gorges was told that "he had been shewed in London for a wonder." reprinted in . Gorges described Epenow as both "of a goodly stature, strong and well proportioned" as well as "a goodly man, of a brave aspect, stout, sober in his demeanor.
According to Winwood, the baby was a "strong and a goodly prince, and doth promise long life".Buisseret, 109. The birth of a dauphin, as the first son of a French king was known, inspired rejoicing and bonfires throughout France.Moote, 20.
"Quelle est cette odeur agréable?" (in English, "Whence is that goodly fragrance flowing?") is a 17th-century traditional French Christmas carol about the Nativity. The carol is sometimes set to music written by John Gay for The Beggar's Opera in 1728.
The present one is a creditable addition to this > goodly list in the publication of which the University of Chicago Press has > taken a leading part.Leon Ardzrooni. "Reviewed Work: Readings in Industrial > Society. by Leon Carroll Marshall," in: Political Science Quarterly. Vol.
Bell, 'Robert Weir Allan and His Work', p. 230. To keep homesickness at bay, porridge was eaten, 'a store of the wherewithal having been sent for from the northern home in a goodly sack'.Bell, 'Robert Weir Allan and His Work', p. 232.
This interesting earthwork, the site where Sir Gervase Clifton (died 1618) 'began to build a goodly house', is a grass field 600 ft. by 300 ft.enclosed on three sides by large banks averaging 35 ft. across the base, and being 4 ft. 6in.
Vail, over 150 people attended, and there was discussion of formally reorganizing the society. A hopeful sign was that even without a permanent minister, local Universalists had raised a "goodly sum" of money to establish a permanent Universalist presence in the city.
It would be very nice to have, with its double track, > electric car track, and roads for vehicles and pedestrians, and would no > doubt create a goodly traffic between the two towns, and be one of the show > works of the continent.
The lychgate The churchyard contains many traditional headstones in the vernacular material, two table tombs, and has a goodly population of box trees and yews. Access is via a lychgate which was moved from Warboys to mark the Hemingford Millennium in 1974.
Smith became a Freemason in Warren Lodge No. 15 at Connersville in 1829. He would go on to serve as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Indiana in 1837.Smith, Dwight L. (1968). Goodly Heritage: One Hundred Fifty Years of Craft Freemasonry in Indiana.
The Midrash deduced this from the use of the word "good" in both where it says, "the gold of that land is good," and where it says, "that goodly hill-country, and Lebanon."Genesis Rabbah 16:2. Land of Israel, 5th century. In, e.g.
God's Word Is Our Great Heritage, is the title of a popular hymn sung in many churches, especially the Lutheran Church. This hymn was inspired by Psalm 16:6: "...yea, I have a goodly heritage." KJVThe Holy Bible (King James Version). London: Thomas Nelson Publishers.
William Chalmers (1833 13 November 1901) was a missionary who became an Anglican bishop in Australia.A Goodly Heritage: A History of the Diocese of Canberra and Goulburn, "William Chalmers, Second Bishop of Goulburn 1892-1901", The Southern Churchman. Vol. 60, July 1962, pp 4-7.
This tablet seems to contain many subjects, such as interpretation of scriptures, religious beliefs and doctrines of the past. The subjects addressed include: Mystical Writings, knowledge, divine philosophy, mysteries of creation, medicine, alchemy, etc. Throughout the book Baháʼu'lláh exhorts men to education, goodly character and divine virtues.
He also wrote two books, Soldier of Salvation, which came out in 1963, and his autobiography, entitled A Goodly Heritage, which came out in 1967. General Kitching retired on 22 November 1963. This day is remembered for the assassination of the President of the United States John F. Kennedy.
A goodly pageant with music followed, after which a great dinner was held at the Guildhall, with many of the council, the judges, and noblemen and their wives. Then the mayor and aldermen proceeded to St Paul's, with much music.Diary of Henry Machyn, p. 294. Lodge was knighted in 1562.
Loafer is a 2011 Oriya film written & directed by Ashok Pati. Babushan, Archita Sahu, and Buddhaditya Mohanty play the lead roles. Sunil Panda produced the film while Goodly Ratha scored the film soundtrack and background score. The film is a remake of the Telugu film Happy starring Allu Arjun & Genelia.
He was a native of Lancashire, elected king's scholar of Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1574, and matriculated there on 20 December 1577. He graduated B.A. in 1578–79, and M.A. in 1585. He took holy orders when B.A., and, according to Anthony Wood, ‘became a goodly divine’ and a noted preacher.
The Pindus Mountains are visible in the background. The river is the Peneus. According to the Iliad, Pelasgians were camping out on the shore together with the following tribes, > Towards the sea lie the Carians and the Paeonians, with curved bows, and the > Leleges and Caucones, and the goodly Pelasgi.Homer. Iliad, 10.428.
Drizzt immediately rushes to help. Dahlia questions his motives. Drizzt assumes that the caravan is goodly in nature, and Dahlia (perhaps more world wise though much younger than Drizzt) does not jump to the same conclusion. Drizzt speaks with the merchants who tell him they are representatives of the High Captains of Luskan.
Mora moro, the common mora, is a deep-sea fish, the only species in the genus Mora. It is found worldwide in temperate seas, at depths of between 300 and 2,500 m. Its length is up to about 80 cm. Other names in English include goodly-eyed cod, googly-eyed cod, and ribaldo.
It also provided access to Avon location 69 from River Terrace and the Avon River. The properties were originally owned by John Herbert, who had built a goodly sized cottage there. The cottage would provide immediate accommodation for the ticket-of-leave holders. Fitzgerald approved the acquisition of both properties on 4 August 1851.
The Guardian 7 Mar 1963: 7. Naughton sold the American film and theatre rights for $100,000, enabling him to become a full-time writer.Mermaid---Globe's Goodly Neighbor Marks, Sally K. Los Angeles Times 25 June 1967: c25. David Susskind bought the rights to produce the play in America, and cast Eric Portman as the father.
Surrey addressed his old friend in one of his last works, a paraphrase of Psalm 73: :But now, my BLAGE, my error well I see; :Such goodly light king David giveth me.The Poems of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, p. 101 The name Blage has replaced the word blame in earlier editions of the poem.
Translation (Edwin Evans)Evans, 1912. Ye wander gladly in light Through goodly mansions, dwellers in Spiritland! Luminous heaven-breezes Touching you soft, Like as fingers when skillfully Wakening harp-strings. Fearlessly, like the slumbering Infant, abide the Beatified; Pure retained, Like unopened blossoms, Flowering ever, Joyful their soul And their heavenly vision Gifted with placid Never-ceasing clearness.
Historical geographer Yeshayahu Press thought the site to be the biblical Hapharaim mentioned in in connection with the tribe of Issachar, by a reversion of its name from what sounded like Afrin ("demons") to a euphemistic sound (lit. "the goodly"), as was common in other Arabic place- names.Ishtori Haparchi, Kaftor u'ferach vol. 2, (3rd edition, published by ed.
Henry David Thoreau The American version of individualist anarchism has a strong emphasis on individual sovereignty. Some individualist anarchists such as Henry David ThoreauJohnson, Ellwood. The Goodly Word: The Puritan Influence in America Literature, Clements Publishing, 2005, p. 138.Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, edited by Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman, Alvin Saunders Johnson, 1937, p. 12.
Below are fourteen figures; the twelve apostles, excluding Judas Iscariot but including Saint Matthias, with Saint Paul and Saint Barnabas. The next window commemorates 'the goodly fellowship of the apostles'. At the top is Saint Michael, with fifteen figures below. These include Isaiah, Elijah, John the Baptist, Saint Athanasius, Saint Augustine, John Wycliffe, Thomas Cranmer, and John Wesley.
William Crane Gray (September 6, 1835 – November 14, 1919) was the first bishop of the Episcopal Church's Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida, which had been split off from the Episcopal Diocese of Florida in October 1892.Cushman, Joseph D., Jr., A Goodly Heritage: The Episcopal Church in Florida, 1821-1892, Gainesville: University of Florida Press (1965) pp. 199-200.
The role of Nellie Forbush was the first time with Hammerstein that Rodgers made the leading female role a belter, rather than a lyric soprano like Laurey in Oklahoma! and Julie in Carousel. According to Mordden, "Nellie was something new in R&H;, carrying a goodly share of the score on a 'Broadway' voice".Mordden 1992, p.
Surprise Lake Camp is a non-profit sleepaway camp located on over in Cold Spring, New York (approximately north of New York City). It is one of the oldest Jewish summer camps in the United States.Leonard Saxe, "How Goodly are Thy Tents": Summer Camps as Jewish Socializing Experiences (UPNE, 2004), , p. 24. Excerpts available at Google Books.
The Bona Esperanza was captained by Sir Hugh Willoughby, a man of 'goodly personage' but one who had absolutely no knowledge of navigation. The expedition leader, Richard Chancellor had planned for such an eventuality, suggesting that the ships regroup at Vardöhuus. After waiting seven days and hearing nothing of either ship, he pushed eastward towards the White Sea.
George Biddle, a 1902 graduate, wrote, “Ninety-five percent of the boys came from what they considered the aristocracy of America. Their fathers belonged to the Somerset, the Knickerbocker, the Philadelphia or the Baltimore Clubs. Among them was a goodly slice of the wealth of the nation.” The Form of 2013 median SAT scores were 700 reading, 710 writing, and 700 math.
Historical Sketch of the Catholic Mission in British Honduras 1851–1893. Belize: The Angelus Press. Then in 1867 Jesuit Fr. Brindisi built the first Catholic rectory and church in Stann Creek. In 1871 he built a better church “with pillars and naves and a goodly size”, and had the assistance of a diocesan missionary priest Leon Maclluchet from 1874 to 1879.
A family stela from Abydos mentions that Khay was the son of Hai and Nub-em-niut. Khay's father was said to be greatly favored by the Lord of the Two Lands and a Troop Commander of the goodly god. Khay's mother Nub-em-niut was a chantress of Amun and Lady of the House. Khay's wife is named Yam.
He was a successful negotiator for the Treaty of Greenwich, although the marriage was not concluded. On 22 March 1543 he rode from Edinburgh to Linlithgow Palace to see the queen for the first time. Mary of Guise showed him the queen out of her swaddling and Sadler wrote that the infant was "as goodly a child I have seen, and like to live".
The family then moved to Lexington, where he would manage one of his father-in-law's sprawling farms. Morgan grew up on the farm outside of Lexington and attended Transylvania College for two years, but was suspended in 1844 for dueling with a fraternity brother. In 1846, Morgan became a Freemason, at Daviess Lodge #22, Lexington, Kentucky.Smith, Dwight L. Goodly Heritage (Grand Lodge of Indiana, 1968) pg.
One of the numerous riddles in the work, in the rajaz metre, runs as follows: Pointed is his spearhead, sharp are his teeth, His progeny are his helpers, dissolving union is his business. He assails his master, clinging to his moustache; Inserting his fangs into old and young. Agreeable, of goodly shape, slim, abstemious. A shooter, with shafts abundant, around the bears and the moustache.
The Temple in Jerusalem, with the altar at right Rabban Johanan ben Zakai interpreted the word "Lebanon" in to refer to the Temple in Jerusalem and "that goodly mountain" to refer to the Temple Mount. Thus one can interpret to say that Moses asked to see God's House.Babylonian Talmud Gittin 56b. Similarly, a Midrash interpreted the word "Lebanon" in to refer to the altar.
Fourth of July celebrations were often held on the beach, as it was fairly easy to set up pyrotechnical displays without fear of causing fires. They were anchored in the sand and fired out over the water. The American Beach played a minor role during Operation Desert Shield. A goodly number of troops heading into the Desert, were provided R&R; at Camp Darby.
Some individualist anarchists such as ThoreauJohnson, Ellwood. The Goodly Word: The Puritan Influence in America Literature, Clements Publishing, 2005, p. 138.Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, edited by Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman, Alvin Saunders Johnson, 1937, p. 12. do not speak of economics, but simply of the right of "disunion" from the state and foresee the gradual elimination of the state through social evolution.
The future Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, John Coleridge, lived here as a young barrister. Charles Appleton lived here for several years. His biographer Archibald Henry Sayce described Netley Cottage as "the pretty artistic home where it was his pride and pleasure to bring together gradually the goodly collection of books, engravings, china, old furniture...". Robert Louis Stevenson and Sidney Colvin frequented the house when Appleton was resident.
Around the same time, John Leland called it a "goodly manour place." Ribbesford House remained in the Mortimer family until the early 17th century, when it passed to Baron Herbert of Cherbury, whose coat of arms still stands at the property. The correspondence of his son Henry with Oliver Cromwell, Queen of Bohemia and other contemporaries was discovered in one of the towers. Parts of the house were renovated in 1669.
As long as I live do not desert me! > Thee I choose, That thou mayst save my soul, My mind, my sense, my body. > O thou of goodly counsels, Victorious, triumphant one, Angelic slayer of > Antichrist! The hymn "Te Splendor" to Saint Michael (which derives its name from the fact that in Latin it begins with Te splendor et virtus Patris) is published in the Raccolta collection of prayers with indulgences.
Immediately, Balaam's eye became blind, as attested in (with its reference to a single open eye).Babylonian Talmud Niddah 31a. Rabbi Joḥanan taught that one may learn Balaam's intentions from the blessings of for God reversed every intended curse into a blessing. Thus Balaam wished to curse the Israelites to have no synagogues or school-houses, for "How goodly are your tents, O Jacob," refers to synagogues and school-houses.
Anime News Network's Theorin Martin commends the manga for "solid storytelling and goodly amounts of fan services." Anime News Network's Theorin Martin commends the manga for its artwork but criticises the manga for bring "overly dramatic in normal speech." IGN commends the manga for its art and Japan's Isaac Asimov, Yasutaka Tsutsui, for his storytelling. Mania.com's Jarred Pine commends the manga for its "good entry into the mystery, psychological thriller genre".
Laden with heavy machinery and a large quantity of office supplies—including a goodly amount of red tape—required by Jefferson Davis' administration, the side wheeler put to sea on September 6 and proceeded under the command of veteran blockade tester, A. Hora—a reserve officer of the Royal Navy—to Halifax, Nova Scotia. After re- coaling at that port, the ship sailed for the North Carolina coast.
The site was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 17 October 2003. Prospect Hill is a “nodal point” of the Cumberland Plain. Its summit affords a “goodly prospect” west to the Blue Mountains and east to the man-made landmarks of central Sydney. People have walked round and over Prospect Hill for 30,000 years and have recognised it as a landmark, a meeting place and a boundary.
They sounded its depth, which they found impressive, and explored its banks. Pring admired the area's "goodly groves and woods."Pring (1906), The Voyage They encountered the native Abenaki people and Pring's description of them provides significant details of pre-colonial Native American life. At that time of year, the Abenaki would likely have been upriver at the Piscataqua's tributaries, where fish and game were plentiful around the numerous falls.
The bizarre story follows a female narrator, Signora Psyche Zenobia. While walking through "the goodly city of Edina" with her poodle and her black servant, Pompey, she is drawn to a large Gothic cathedral. At the steeple, Zenobia sees a small opening she wishes to look through. Standing on Pompey's shoulders, she pushes her head through the opening, realizing she is in the face of a giant clock.
Emerson, Kathy Lynn. A Who's Who of Women, retrieved 3 October 2010 In her will, Cecily had expressed her wish to be buried with her first husband, and had made the necessary provisions for the construction of a "goodly tomb".Emerson, retrieved 3 October 2010 She also requested for a thousand masses to be said for her soul "in as convenient haste as may be".Nicolas. Testamenta Vetusta. p.
10 The hills were covered with the shadow of it, and the boughs thereof were like the goodly cedars. 11 She sent out her boughs unto the sea, and her branches unto the river. 12 Why hast thou then broken down her hedges, so that all they which pass by the way do pluck her? 13 The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
The First Battle of Alton failed to stop the Danish Army. It attacked Devon, burning many towns such as Teignton, until the area surrendered. The advance continued towards Exmouth, until it reached Pin-hoo, where the high-steward of the king, Cole, and Edsy, the reeve of the king once again raised an army against it at the Battle of Pinhoe. Again the Danes prevailed and burned 'many goodly towns that we cannot name'.
The League's stated purpose was" to promote and strengthen a worthy Imperial Spirit in British-born boys".Rashna B. Singh. Goodly is our Heritage: Children's Literature, Empire, and the Certitude of Character, Scarecrow Press, 2004 (p.43) The paper was edited by Howard Spicer (later Sir Howard). In 1911, Melrose was living at 68 Southwood Lane, Highgate, with his wife Margaret and their children Ernest (20), Douglas (17), Allan (14), Kenneth (11) and Marjorie (9).
In 1653 the poet, John Taylor, who had travelled from Petworth to Steyning, wrote: > :August the 18, twelve long miles to Steyning :I rode, and nothing saw there > worth the Kenning. :But that mine host there was a jovial Wight. :My Hostess > fat and fair, a goodly sight: :The sign, the Chequer, eighteen pence to pay. > :My mare eat mortal meat, good Oats and Hay.Caldecott, J.B. John Taylor’s > Tour of Sussex in 1653.
Bears coach Lovie Smith and defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli visited Austin and "spent a goodly amount of time with him." On August 22, Austin's season was cut short as he tore his pectoral muscle during a preseason game against the Bears. He was placed on injured reserve on August 30. Austin saw his first appearance come in the Giants' second game of the 2012 NFL season, when the Giants played the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The publishing house, masterminded by James P. Harrison, published the Southern Cultivator, the oldest Confederate agrarian journal in the Antebellum South.David B. Parker, Alias Bill Arp: Charles Henry Smith and the South's Goodly Heritage, Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 2009, pp. 94-95 It also published the books of one of its contributors, Southern author Bill Arp (1823-1906). Additionally, it published the 1885 novel Psyche, written by Georgian author Odessa Strickland Payne.
A battle rages with great slaughter. Haakon and his men die in battle, and they see the valkyrie Göndul leaning on a spear shaft. Göndul comments that "groweth now the gods' following, since Hákon has been with host so goodly bidden home with holy godheads." Haakon hears "what the valkyries said," and the valkyries are described as sitting "high-hearted on horseback," wearing helmets, carrying shields and that the horses wisely bore them.
White wrote: :That summer Harlan found his own apartment -- three doors up the street, in a building with an elevator. And he met a woman, Linda Solomon, who also lived in the same building. Linda would go on to a career of her own in writing and editing, but that was mostly ahead of her in 1960. Linda had a small but well-selected record collection, containing a goodly amount of jazz.
The married life of Malcolm III and Margaret has been the subject of three historical novels: A Goodly Pearl (1905) by Mary H. Debenham, and Malcolm Canmore's Pearl (1907) by Agnes Grant Hay, and Sing, Morning Star by Jane Oliver (1949). They focus on court life in Dunfermline, and the Margaret helping introduce Anglo-Saxon culture in Scotland. The latter two novels cover events to 1093, ending with Malcolm's death.Baker (1914), p.
By 1871, the chapel of ease was named St John's and Bishop John Lewis wished to establish it as the pro-cathedral of the Diocese of Ontario. St. John's soon became known as The Bishop's Chapel, a name it was to have until 1874. In that year, when the congregation of "goodly and godly" people was sufficiently large, the Parish Church of St. John the Evangelist was consecrated and the Reverend H. Pollard was installed as the first Rector.
One is by land, along the point called Nuestra Señora de Guia. It extends for about a legua along the shore, and is very clean and level. Thence it passes through a native street and settlement, called Bagunbayan, to a chapel, much frequented by the devout, called Nuestra Señora de Guia, and continues for a goodly distance further to a monastery and mission-house of the Augustinians, called Mahalat." Rizal who republished Morga's account, later annotated: "Better, Maalat.
It is in the short-story that Davis has perhaps achieved her most eminent success. Many of these were written for the northern monthlies, and a goodly number were collected and republished in An Elephant's Track and Other Stories. Here she introduced a great variety of motifs as well as of incidents and characters. The lighter and more humorous aspects of life were her favorites, but the stern and terrible problems were occasionally handled with ruthless fidelity and power.
The quarry was mentioned by John Leland in the description of Manchester in his book. The Itinerary of John Leland in or about the years 1535 to 1543, saying that there was " a goodly quarre hard by the towne". Stone was transported the short distance into Manchester by river on barges or rafts. The quarry is disused and the area around it has been turned into a park called "Sandhills" as part of Manchester City Council's Irk Valley Project.
This move divided many contemporary music critics, describing his self-comparison as "goodly brash" or "conventionally disrespectful." It was also interpreted as a diss track towards Tory Lanez, who was unhappy at Drake for popularizing the term "The Six" when referencing Toronto. Drake also crashed a Bat Mitzvah in New York City on February 20, performing at the event. Drake soon released the album's lead singles, "Pop Style" and the dancehall-infused "One Dance", on April 5.
The area once belonged to Mrs. Griffin of Whiteside, west of Petrie, and was acquired by a Scottish migrant by the name of Thomas Petrie in 1855. The name Kallangur originates from the Aboriginal word kalangoor, meaning a goodly or satisfactory place. Kallangur is situated in the Yugarabul traditional Aboriginal country of the Brisbane and surrounding regions, however, the word kalangoor is from the Kabi dialect, from the traditional Aboriginal Gubbi Gubbi (Kabi) country of the Sunshine Coast and surrounding regions.
Fletcher also recorded climate information and characterised the unpleasant summer weather conditions of the area near the careenage basin. He noted the continuous nipping chill; lack of sun; and cold, sometimes violent, winds. In contrast, across the Inverness Ridge, he found a distinct climate variance and experienced a flourishing land. Fletcher assessed the area: "The inland we found to be farre different from the shoare, a goodly country and fruitful soyle, stored with many blessings fit for the use of man".
Drawing of effigies of Sir John Talbot and his two wives, St John the Baptist Church, Bromsgrove Arms of Talbot: Gules, a lion rampant or a bordure engrailed of the last effigies of Sir John Talbot and his two wives, St John the Baptist Church, Bromsgrove Sir John Talbot (c. 1485 - 22 October 1542 or 10 September 1549) of Pepperhill, Boningalealso known as 'goodly lodge' overlooking Albrighton park was an English knight and lord of the manors of Albrighton and Grafton.
Ufens is a character in Virgil's The Aeneid as well as Silius' Punica. According to The Aeneid: "Next Ufens, mountain-bred, from Nersae came to join the war; of goodly fame was he for prosperous arms: his Aequian people show no gentle mien, but scour the woods for prey, or, ever-armed, across the stubborn glebe compel the plough; though their chief pride and joy are rapine, violence, and plundered store." Aeneid 744-50. In The Aeneid 12.460, Ufens was killed by Gyas.
Other common chowders include seafood chowder, which includes fish, clams, and many other types of shellfish; lamb or veal chowder made with barley; corn chowder, which uses corn instead of clams; a wide variety of fish chowders;"Fish Chowders Make Goodly Fare" Brooklyn Eagle (11 March 1912): 22. via Newspapers.com and potato chowder, which is often made with cheese. Fish chowder, corn chowder, lamb chowder and especially clam chowder are popular in the North American regions of New England and Atlantic Canada.
Jane Dammen McAuliffe Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān Volume 1 Georgetown University, Washington DC p.32 In spite of the goodly dwellings given to the inhabitants of paradise, the approval of God and nearness to Him is considered greater. According to the Quran, God will bring the elect near to his throne ('), a day on which "some faces shall be shining in contemplating their Lord." The vision of God is regarded as the greatest of all rewards, surpassing all other joys.
Other terms are used, including "Warner", "bearer of glad tidings", and the "one who invites people to a Single God" (Quran , and ). The Quran asserts that Muhammad was a man who possessed the highest moral excellence, and that God made him a good example or a "goodly model" for Muslims to follow (Quran , and ). The Quran disclaims any superhuman characteristics for Muhammad, but describes him in terms of positive human qualities. In several verses, the Quran crystallizes Muhammad's relation to humanity.
View of Nachlaot from Sacher Park, February 2015 Street of the Stairs, Nahalat Ahim The neighborhoods that make up the Nachlaot district were established beginning in the late 1870s outside the walls of the Old City, which was becoming increasingly overcrowded and unsanitary. The first was Mishkenot Yisrael, built in 1875. The name comes from a biblical verse (): "How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob/Thy dwellings, O Israel." Mazkeret Moshe was founded by Sir Moses Montefiore in 1882 as an Ashkenazi neighborhood.
The Missionary Jurisdiction of Southern Florida in 1922 became the Diocese of South Florida.Cushman, Joseph D., Jr., A Goodly Heritage: The Episcopal Church in Florida, 1821-1892, Gainesville: University of Florida Press (1965) p.ix. The diocese named its residence for retired clergy and others in Davenport, Florida after the first bishop. In 1969, the Diocese of South Florida was split into three dioceses as follows: the Diocese of Central Florida, the Diocese of Southeast Florida and the Diocese of Southwest Florida.
Most, though, arose as outlying daughter settlements of Frankish villages in the 7th or 8th century. This came about when the original Frankish centres outgrew their loess soils and young, marriageable farmers began clearing goodly areas of old-growth forest for expanded farmland. The new centre in each case was often given the first settler's name with the ending —bach, as had it also been with the places with names ending in —heim. Thus, Frankelbach can be interpreted as “Franko’s brook”, for instance.
A battle rages with great slaughter, and part of the description employs the kenning "Skögul's-stormblast" for "battle". Haakon and his men die in battle, and they see the valkyrie Göndul leaning on a spear shaft. Göndul comments that "groweth now the gods' following, since Hákon has been with host so goodly bidden home with holy godheads". Haakon hears "what the valkyries said", and the valkyries are described as sitting "high-hearted on horseback", wearing helmets, carrying shields and that the horses wisely bore them.
It has a stately look, that old building, indistinctly seen, as it is, among the umbrageous trees." George Borrow describes Joseph John Gurney's objections to fishing: "'Canst thou answer to thy conscience for pulling all those fish out of the river, and leaving them to gasp in the sun?' said a voice, clear and sonorous as a bell. I started and looked round. Close behind me stood the tall figure of a man, dressed in raiment of quaint and singular fashion, but of goodly materials.
Eliza enters and soon falls into talking about the weather and her family. Whilst she is now able to speak in beautifully modulated tones, the substance of what she says remains unchanged from the gutter. She confides her suspicions that her aunt was killed by relatives, and mentions that gin had been "mother's milk" to this aunt, and that Eliza's own father was always more cheerful after a goodly amount of gin. Higgins passes off her remarks as "the new small talk", and Freddy is enraptured.
The club was founded in April 1947 in the dressing room of comedian Jimmy Edwards at the Windmill Theatre in London. There were 10 founder members, including Edwards, Raymond Glendenning, and Frank Muir. The minutes of that first meeting are in the Club archives and it appears that although there was a goodly number of founder members they were outnumbered by chorus girls! The object of the Club was, and still is, to bring together moustache wearers (beards being strictly prohibited) socially for sport and general conviviality.
While the architect is unknown, St. Mary's English Gothic Design has been described as "a little box of place, an old dwelling fixed nicely inside."Quinn, Frederick. Building the "Goodly Fellowship of Faith": A History of the Episcopal Church in Utah, 1867-1996. Utah State University Press, Logan : 2004 However, St. Mary's defining stained glass windows were not installed until the time of the Reverend John Howes (1937-1949). When St. Mary's Church opened in 1907 it was a small congregation consisting of only eleven parishioners.
Godwin rapidly became a popular preacher. Elizabeth 1st was so pleased with his 'good parts' and 'goodly person' that in 1565 she appointed his one of her Lent preachers. In June 1565 he was appointed Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, and proceeded B.D. and D.D.. When Elizabeth visited Oxford in 1565, Godwin was one of the four divines appointed to hold theological disputations before her. The winter after her visit Elizabeth promoted Godwin to Dean of Canterbury a post he held for 17 years (1567-1584).
God's lot fell upon Abraham and his descendants, as reports, "For the Lord's portion is his people; Jacob is the lot of his inheritance." God said that God's soul lives by the portion and lot that fell to God, as says, "The lots have fallen to me in pleasures; yea, I have a goodly heritage." God then descended with the 70 angels who surround the throne of God's glory and they confused the speech of humankind into 70 nations and 70 languages.Pirke De-Rabbi Eliezer, chapter 24.
Saul is the chosen one, tall, handsome and "goodly",: King James Version a king appointed by Yahweh, and anointed by Samuel, Yahweh's prophet, and yet he is ultimately rejected. Saul has two faults which make him unfit for the office of king: carrying out a sacrifice in place of Samuel (1 Samuel 13:8–14), and failing to exterminate the Amalekites, in accordance to God's commands, and trying to compensate by claiming that he reserved the surviving Amalekite livestock for sacrifice (1 Samuel 15).
A goodly number of historians now consider it highly likely that this document was "a false broadcast, in the form of leaks by the government" to destabilize and undermine Blanqui. If so, it worked. Barbès apparently believed in the authenticity of this document, and this caused "terrible divisions" among those of the left, divisions still present at the end of the century. The two men, who had become distrustful of one another, ended up hating each other with the same passion that had fueled their early revolutionary idealism.
Around the perimeter of the window are twenty panels. If you think of the face of a clock, the section between 9 and 12 is the glorious company of the apostles from 12 to 3 the goodly fellowship of the prophets, between 3 and 6 the noble army of martyrs and lastly the saints of the Holy Church throughout the world. The window took Frank Spears two years to complete and cost £6,000 in the early 1930s. The three lancet windows below the rose window (from left) Hosea, King David and Isiah.
As in later decades, the 1870s saw many songs which were designed to get the listeners to support a certain political point of view or perspective. This was the dawn of a new musical genre which has been influencing a good deal of music in the modern world as well. The big things which inspired protests in this time were prohibiting alcohol, which became a major goal of the progressive era, especially among Republicans. These included hits such as "Sons of Temperance" and "Let Us Pass This Goodly Measure".
Ohmbach, which had originally been purely a farming village, was already home in the 19th century to a goodly number of workers, who mostly earned their livelihoods at the nearby coalmines in the Saarland. Beginning in 1888, there were also job opportunities at Isidor Trifuß's diamond-cutting workshop at the Neumühle (“New Mill”) between Ohmbach and Brücken. Later, such workshops were set up in Ohmbach itself, often small family businesses. After the Second World War, one fourth of the local workforce was for a time employed at the workshops.
Matthew 13:45–46 (KJV): "Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchant man, seeking goodly pearls: Who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he had, and bought it." A copy of the Pearl of Great Price from NASA photographer M. Edward Thomas traveled to the moon and back in 1972 with astronaut John Young aboard Apollo 16.Stephenson, Kathy. "Book of Mormon that traveled to the moon makes a Utah landing", The Salt Lake Tribune, 2 October 2019.
He also "methodised, corrected, and further enlarged" a goodly quarto, entitled A New Directory for the East Indies … being a work originally begun upon the plan of the Oriental Neptune, augmented and improved by Mr. Willm. Herbert, Mr. Willm. Nichelson, and others, London, 1780, which reached a fifth edition the same year. Dunn was living at 8 Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, in July 1777, but by September 1780 had taken up his abode at 1 Boar's Head Court, Fleet Street, where he continued for the remainder of his life.
Alexander Lanier was himself a Freemason, and his newly built tavern could support a lodge room being set up in the upstairs meeting room. It was here that the constitution to start the Grand Lodge of Indiana was approved, and nine lodges from Indiana demitted from the Grand Lodge of Kentucky to form the initial lodges of the Grand Lodge of Indiana. There is no evidence it was ever used again for Masonic ceremonies for 150 years afterwards.Smith, Dwight L. Goodly Heritage (Grand Lodge F. & A.M. of Indiana, 1968) pg.
40 of the trees which, according to Daniel, were used in erecting the sukkah, the phrase "periez hadar" (the fruit of goodly trees) is more definitely explained by "kappot temarim" (branches of palms), the palm being distinguished for its beauty (Cant. vii. 8). Like Anan, Benjamin al-Nahawandi, and Ishmael al-Ukbari, Daniel forbade in the Diaspora the eating of those animals that were used for sacrifice, adding to the proofs of his predecessors others drawn from Hosea ix. 4 and Isa. lxvi. 3. The prohibition contained in Exodus xxiii.
110, 111. In the end of his life Martin himself wrote that "Mostly, we dug out of curiosity, for fun, for specimens, and to write the historical details for these sites and for this time period ... I fear some of [the excavations] were the result of my callow youth: the desire to make a name for myself by aping Kidder ... [and] to obtain a goodly amount of loot for the Museum, for I was, at the time, very museum minded."Nash 2010, p. 111, cites Paul S. Martin (1974).
His friend William Drummond encouraged the publication of his most famous poem: Muses Threnodie: of Mirthful Mournings on the death of Mr Gall, (Edinburgh 1638 – see 1638 in poetry). The poem is an important document for its general account of Perth in the seventeenth century. Adamson is credited with first using the word curling in 1620. He related that his friend, Mr Gall, "a citizen of Perth, and a gentle-man of goodly stature, and pregnant wit, much given to pastime, as golf, archerie, curling and jovial companie".
The medieval epic The Tale of Igor's Campaign refers to the "bloody river banks of Nyamiha." Lines from the famous epic detail the gruesome battle: On the Nemiga the spread sheaves are heads, the flails that threshare of steel, lives are laid out on the threshing floor, souls are winnowed from bodies. Nemiga’s gory banks are not sowed goodly-sown with the bones of Russia’s sons. For a long time it was the second largest river flowing through Minsk, until it was adapted for its urban location by containment within a network of pipes.
The valediction had been prepared by Unwin's family in his own style: "Goodly Byelode loyal peeploders! Now all gatherymost to amuse it and have a tilty elbow or a nice cuffle- oteedeeOh Yes!" Suns of Arqa released a tribute album to Unwin (entitled "Tributey") following his death, featuring a selection of his works with the band over the years, as well as various interviews. Unwin's work is considered to have been a significant influence on the two books written by John Lennon: In His Own Write (1964) and A Spaniard in the Works (1965).
At the bathing lake in Nieder-Roden there are roughly 2,000 parking places right near the entrance to the bathing beach. At all six S-Bahn stations, 400 “park & ride” places are available all together. Jügesheim has at its disposal two underground parking garages in the community core, and at the community centres in Dudenhofen, Weiskirchen and Nieder-Roden, and at every sport hall are found major carparks. Even the five forest leisure facilities offer goodly parking, as does the hiking carpark in the eastern woods on the Lange Schneise (“Long Aisle”).
Randolph and her rich prizes reached Charleston on the morning of 6 September. While the frigate was in port having her hull scraped, the president of South Carolina's General Assembly, John Rutledge, suggested to Biddle that Randolph, aided by a number of State Navy ships, might be able to break the blockade which was then bottling up a goodly number of American merchantmen in Charleston Harbor. Biddle accepted command of the task force, which, besides Randolph, included General Moultrie, Notre Dame, Fair American, and Polly. The American ships sailed on 14 February 1778.
He was described as a "Knight of goodly personage, and as comely a man as could be seen", and performed services to the Crown of England. As recompense, the Lords of the council, in their letter to the Deputy Lieutenant, St. Leger, dated at Windsor 5 August 1550, transmitted the directions of King Edward VI of England to create him Viscount Mountgarret. This was done by patent, bearing date at Dublin 23 October.Lodge, John The Peerage of Ireland or, A Genealogical History Of The Present Nobility Of That Kingdom, 1789, Vol IV, p 23.
The reviewer for The Associated Press wrote that "It has some well-written passages, some warm, moving moments and a goodly share of funny lines...Miss Pearson has talent, no question. But I hope someday she flees the pack of local scriveners who think West Side woe, shrinks and trips to Bloomingdale's are worth writing about."Sharbutt, Jay. "'Sally and Marsha' Bows Off-Broadway", The Associated Press, February 22, 1982, BC cycle, Dateline:New York (no page number) She wrote the book for the musical Baby, which ran on Broadway in 1984,Rich, Frank.
On one occasion, when Catherine of Aragon married Arthur, Prince of Wales in 1501, a grand tournament was held in New Palace Yard. A stand was erected for the King on the south side of the yard and challengers exited Westminster Hall on horseback. They proceeded into the yard accompanied by a pageant-car which was drawn by four animals and carried a "fair young lady" on "a goodly chair of cloth of gold". Jousting is last recorded to have taken place in the yard in 1547 when Edward VI was crowned.
There is also an account for a far older holiday meeting which Lodowicke Muggleton and his daughter, Sarah, attended in July 1682 at the Green Man pub in Holloway, then a popular rural retreat to the north of London. In addition to a goodly meal with wine and beer, a quartern of tobacco, one-fifth of a pound, was gotten through and a shilling paid out to "ye man of the bowling green". Outside of holiday times, meetings seem to have altered little with time and place. They comprised discussion, readings and songs.
White's friend Charles Lamb considered it to be "full of goodly quips and rare fancies, 'all deftly masked like hoar antiquity' — much superior to Dr. Kenrick's Falstaff 's Wedding."Talfourd, Thomas Noon, Life and Letters of Charles Lamb, Willis, Philadelphia, 1856, p.18. He published a review of the book in The Critical Review in which he criticised Kenrick because "the peculiar quaintness of the character [of Falstaff] was lost by being sunk in modern wit", a defect supposedly avoided in White's book.Preface, The Falstaff Letters, Alexander Morning, 1904, p.xiv.
In the middle of the 14th century there are references to men of Cheshire who were made constables of the royal castle. The constable would probably have lived in or near the gatehouse. The habitation was described in an account of the castle in 1593 by Sampson Erdeswicke, which describes, "a goodly strong gatehouse, and strong wall with other buildings, which when they flourished were a convenient habitation for any great personage." Beeston was kept in good repair and improved during Edward's reign, and throughout the 14th century.
For the litany, Cranmer drew heavily on both traditional and recent sources ranging from John Chrysostom to Martin Luther, the bulk of the material coming from the Sarum Rite. Much of the work of synthesizing these sources was originally done by William Marshall in his Lutheran-oriented Goodly Primer of 1535. Cranmer also changed the rhythm of the service by grouping the intercessory phrases in blocks with but a single response to the group. The litany was published in the midst of the English Reformation and shows clear signs of Protestant influence.
Newspeak is a fictional language in 1984 based on the sole goal of agglutination, as expressed by the character Syme, "Every concept that can ever be needed will be expressed by exactly one word" For instance, using the root word "good" we can form words such as goodly (does well), plusgood (very good), doubleplusgood (very good), and ungood (bad). Words with comparative and superlative meanings are also simplified, so "better" becomes "gooder", and "best" becomes "goodest."Orwell, George (1949). Nineteen Eighty-Four, "Appendix: The Principles of Newspeak", pp. 309–323.
I have always been suspicious of this sort of claim, but, > the reader of this piece of writing need not doubt the truth of the > following sentence. I was so impressed by the English version of Puszták > népe that I afterwards learned the language of the original and, as of now, > have read a goodly part of it. In June 2018 Murnane released a spoken word album, Words in Order. The centrepiece is a 1600-word palindrome written by Murnane, which he recites over a minimalist musical score.
The result of the sudden shift of the party line caused shock and confusion among many members of the Communist Party USA, a goodly number of whom had joined during the period of the Popular Front against fascism.Ottanelli, The Communist Party of the United States, pg. 198. Browder declared at one Philadelphia rally that only "a dozen or so" had left the CPUSA over the change of line; but this was simply untrue. On the contrary, the party's ranks fell by 15% between 1939 and 1940, and recruitment of new members in 1940 fell by 75% from 1938 levels.
The GEOSKOP museum of the primeval world was opened at the castle as an outpost of the Pfalzmuseum für Naturkunde (Palatine Museum for Natural History) in 1998. It is devoted mainly to the geological history of the local rotliegend rocks. At the Fritz-Wunderlich-Halle, a multipurpose hall used for presentations, theatre and concert productions, and used by the school centre on the Roßberg as an auditorium, a cultural programme of surprising comprehensiveness for such a small town is offered in collaboration with the local authorities. This includes a goodly number of appearances by both German and international touring theatre troupes.
In the written memoirs of Lady Dorothy Nevill she recalls in her manuscript Mannington and the Walpoles, Earls of Orford (1894) that her great-grandfather Horatio Walpole, 1st Baron Walpole of Wolterton was given an goodly sinecure by his brother Robert for the sum of £3,000 per annum. This allowed Horatio to acquire hardwood, mainly walnut to make up the doors windows and shutters for the hall. Horatio also imported a quantity of the American turkeys which were kept in the woods around Wolterton and in all probability were the embryo flock for the popular Norfolk turkey breeds of today.
Moses Mendelssohn's glasses, in the Jewish Museum, Berlin It was after the breakdown of his health that Mendelssohn decided to "dedicate the remains of my strength for the benefit of my children or a goodly portion of my nation"—which he did by trying to bring the Jews closer to "culture, from which my nation, alas! is kept in such a distance, that one might well despair of ever overcoming it". One of the means of doing this was by "giving them a better translation of the holy books than they previously had".Moses Mendelssohn, private letter to August Hennings, 29 July 1779.
Soon afterwards, Manley divided his fleet, keeping Lynch and Lee with his flagship Hancock. On the afternoon of 2 April they sighted brig Elizabeth. This prize, an American vessel captured by the British the previous October, was full of loot plundered from the warehouses of patriot merchants just before the evacuation of Boston, and carried a goodly number of Tory refugees. Many of the Tories were transferred to Lee, their leaders were taken on board Hancock, and the captive crew was imprisoned in Lynch, which accompanied Hancock to Portsmouth, arriving 4 April to refit and recruit.
A Midrash employed this understanding of "Lebanon" as the Temple to explain the role of gold in the world. Rabbi Simeon ben Lakish taught that the world did not deserve to have the use of gold. But God created gold for the sake of the Tabernacle (for example, in ) and the Temple. The Midrash deduced this from the use of the word "good" in both where it says, "the gold of that land is good," and where it says, "that goodly hill-country, and Lebanon," concluding that the gold of the land was created for that which is good, the Temple.
An example of this is the hermit to whom Arthur brings Timias and Serena. Initially, the man is considered a "goodly knight of a gentle race" who "withdrew from public service to religious life when he grew too old to fight". Here, we note the hermit's noble blood seems to have influenced his gentle, selfless behaviour. Likewise, audiences acknowledge that young Tristram "speaks so well and acts so heroically" that Calidore "frequently contributes him with noble birth" even before learning his background; in fact, it is no surprise that Tristram turns out to be the son of a king, explaining his profound intellect.
The mayoralty was united with the one in Ulmet in 1861, but became separate again in 1887. In 1878, a new church was built. In this rural community with a goodly share of workers among its population, there was a noticeable shift towards polarization of political groupings in the wake of the First World War. Quite early on, the Nazi Party (NSDAP) gained a strong foothold in Sankt Julian, winning 29.8% of the vote locally in May 1924 Reichstag election (today, the Social Democratic Party of Germany is said to be the village’s strongest political party).
The record combined samples from children's music with psychedelic guitar work and unusual percussion, and was critically acclaimed, later ranking on several critics' year-end best albums lists. The band followed with Goodly Time (1999). In a review for Uncut, Stubbs credited the album with "uncover[ing] old cardboard boxes of stuff that, even in this supposed era of kitsch, have remained repressed and untouched." Following a decade-long hiatus, follow-up Position Normal was released in 2009, originally only on cassette, It was ranked as one of the best albums of 2009 by The Wire.
The school was founded in 1546 by a group of twenty yeomen and merchants who bought some land from the Crown "for the benefit of Colyton". Their first act was to endow a grammar school "for the goodly and virtuous education of children in Colyton forever". The school was situated in a single room over the porch of the parish church until the feoffees hired a room in the town and the school was moved. In 1612, the school moved to the Church House, which had been enlarged by having another story built on to it.
She died in Collingwood, Victoria (a suburb of Melbourne) on 21 October 1895, was buried at Melbourne General Cemetery in Carlton North, Victoria and was survived by sons Owen and George. Louisa Anne Meredith's Gravestone at Melbourne General Cemetery Meredith was the author of two novels, Phoebe's Mother (1869), which had appeared in the Melbourne weekly The Australasian in 1866 under the title of Ebba, and Nellie, or Seeking Goodly Pearls (1882). Many of her books were illustrated by herself. Her volumes on New South Wales, Tasmania, and Victoria in the 1840s and 1850s, will always retain their historical significance.
With his American status, he maintained his Canadian heritage: "There's no way you can be a Canadian and think you can lose it ... Canadians are a goodly group. They are very aware of caring and helping." On 19 May 2005, during the centennial gala of his birth province, Saskatchewan, Leslie Nielsen was introduced to HM Queen Elizabeth II. In 1997, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to him. On 20 February 2002, Nielsen was named an honorary citizen of West Virginia and an Ambassador of Mountain State Goodwill.
Ma Tovu (Hebrew for "O How Good" or "How Goodly") is a prayer in Judaism, expressing reverence and awe for synagogues and other places of worship. The prayer begins with , where Balaam, sent to curse the Israelites, is instead overcome with awe at God and the Israelites' houses of worship. Its first line of praise is a quote of Balaam's blessing and is thus the only prayer commonly used in Jewish services that was written by a non-Jew. The remainder of the text is derived from passages in Psalms relating to entering the house of worship and preparation for further prayer (; ; ; and ).
Two English captains, Arthur Barlowe and Phillip Armadas, were commissioned by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1584 to explore the New World. They landed on North Carolina’s coast July 2, 1584 to begin their research. In their 1585 report to Raleigh, they wrote favorably of the Indian population in "…the country Neusiok, situated upon a goodly river called Neuse…", as it was called by the local population. In 1865 during the American Civil War, the Confederates burned one of the last ironclad warships which they had built, the Ram Neuse, to prevent its capture by Union troops.
" In and 26, the haftarah answers, "lift up your voice with strength," God "is strong in power." hoped for Jerusalem that "the punishment of your iniquity is accomplished" and God "will no more carry you away into captivity." In the haftarah affirms, "Bid Jerusalem take heart, and proclaim to her, that her time of service is accomplished, that her guilt is paid off." As well, the haftarah echoes the parashah. In the parashah in Moses pleads, "Let me go over, I pray, and see the good land that is beyond the Jordan, that goodly hill-country, and Lebanon.
In Hebrews 13:17, the version reads, "Obey your prelates and be subject unto them." In Luke 3:3, John came "preaching the baptism of penance." In Psalm xxiii:5, where the King James Version reads, "My cup runneth over," the Douai version, taking its cue from the Greek Septuagint, reads, "My chalice which inebriateth me, how goodly it is." There is a retention of ecclesiastical terms, and an explanation of the passages on which Protestants tended to differ rather sharply from Roman Catholics, as in the matter of the taking of the cup by the people, and elsewhere.
The plot involves a depressed witch who is 'summoned' by a pair of children, named Small and Tender, who are upset at not being able to scare anyone on Halloween. The witch turns them into a werewolf and ghost (previously their Halloween costumes), and their babysitter Bazooey into a Frankenstein's monster. The witch then takes them to the Halloween party-in- progress at her isolated mansion on the edge of town. However, the citizens of the town get offended at the thought of real monsters in their town, and form a mob, under the leadership of the strait-laced 'Goodly'.
His brother went on the road, and there came #brigands who slew him and took his money. Then came creditors #[and t]ook captive this Jacob, they put chains of iron on his neck #and irons about his legs. He stayed there an entire year ... #[and afterwards] we took him in surety; we paid out sixty [coins] and there ye[t...] #remained forty coins; so we have sent him among the holy communities #that they might take pity on him. So now, O our masters, raise up your eyes to heaven #and do as is your goodly custom, for you know how great is the virtue #of charity.
Late in July, William Badger—laden with a "goodly supply of provisions, clothing, and stores" for the ships of the Union Navy maintaining the blockade off Confederate-held Wilmington, North Carolina—was towed by the steamer to the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron base at Beaufort, North Carolina. She remained there as a supply hulk for the remainder of the Civil War and, on occasion, served as an accommodations vessel. She was sold at auction at Beaufort on 17 October 1865 to a Capt. James Abel, William Badger may have been broken up shortly thereafter, as she is not carried on mercantile lists in succeeding years.
Klimek said that, "I will get rid of him some other way," and claimed that Nellie had given her a "goodly portion" of a poison called "Rough on Rats". After Klimek's arrest, it came to light that several relatives and neighbors of the two women had died. Two neighbors Klimek had quarreled with became gravely ill after being given candy by her.Chicago Tribune, November 17, 1922 A dog that annoyed Klimek in her Winchester Street house had died of arsenic poisoning.Chicago Tribune, November 19, 1922 Several of Klimek and Nellie's cousins and relatives were found to have become gravely ill shortly after eating at Klimek's house.
Ingeborg worked to install the so-called vårfrupenningen to a regular fee, a goal she succeeded with by permission of Charles VIII of Sweden in 1450, and again from Christian I of Denmark in 1461. In 1462, she received the papal legate Marinus de Fregeno in Vadstena. Upon the request of Christian I, she wrote the (C 50, UUB), Fjorton råd om ett gudeligt leverne (Fourteen Advises to live goodly), likely before his visit in 1461. Ingeborg is believed to have supported the Roman side against Conciliarism and the new Papal policy of Concords and diplomacy, and opposed the national centralism of Charles VIII of Sweden.
John's son returned to England first, transporting a large botanical collection of Humboldt's after he had kindly intervened on their behalf during their sojourn to keep them safe. Fraser returned from Cuba to America and then to England in 1801 or 1802 with "a goodly collection of rarities,"Brendel and the Journal of Horticulture (1877) differ as to whether the return trip was made in 1801 or 1802; they also differ on the birthdate of his son John. Several of the references differ as to where John Fraser died, and whether he was 60 or 61 at his death. one of which was his discovery (as a European) of Jatropha pandurifolia.
In 1336 he engaged and defeated the Burkes of Clanricarde, killing three score and six ... both good and bad. He is credited with having repaired the churches and he taught truth to its chieftains and dissensions and taught charity and humanity in his goodly districts. He built a 'distinguished residence' at Magh Bealaigh. Eoghan was the recipient of a poem by Seán Mór Ó Dubhagáin (died 1372) which gave his pedigree and flattered Eoghan, stating that There is not a wood nor bog not plain/not a river nor bright-pooled lake/not a harbour from Caradh to Grian/which is not due to thee o tranquil faced youth.
Several of his contemporaries at Wolverhampton were also ambitious, rising clerics, like the consecutive Hatherton prebendaries Godfrey Goodman, a Catholic sympathiser and future bishop, and Cesar Callendrine,Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 330. a German Calvinist minister who long headed the Dutch Reformed Church in London. Hall found St Peter's under the thumb of Walter Leveson: "the freedom of a goodly Church, consisting of a Dean and eight prebendaries competently endowed, and many thousand souls lamentably swallowed up by wilful recusants, in a pretended fee-farm for ever." Because of this the prebend was worth only 19 nobles or £6 3s. 4d.
The film Carmen, Baby, according to one reviewer, was the beginning of Metzger's successful style in his later films: that is, adapting "a literary classic in a gorgeous European locale with high polish and a goodly helping of sophisticated sex and seduction." Film critic Jesse Vogel noted that the film is an example of Metzger's signature style, "cool, classy, distant, with a distinctively European sensibility". According to film reviewer Gary Morris, Carmen was "well played" by Uta Levka; lighting and camerawork by Hans Jura was "first-rate". Another reviewer wrote that the film had "a rather classy look" and that the performers were "attractive" and the setting "beautiful".
Phumphans were noted in particular for a culture suffused with a goodly amount of yiddishkeit and Jewish tradition and for their extreme xenophobia. Phumpha and Phumphans were first encountered in the game in the person of Gregor Herman Werschtenschnitzelbaum, Graf von und zu Schtumpen-Schtumpen, an old friend of the then Czar Raoul Raskolnikov. Werschtenschnitzelbaum claimed to be "Hereditary Goon of Phumpha," having fled that country during some unspecified war or revolution that decimated the ruling Goon family. His claim to the title was later shown to be tenuous, at best; if he was even related to the Goons, it turned out that there were others more closely related.
It was noted as one of the UK's strongest rowing schools during the 20th century, with 20% of the 23-strong men's GB rowing squad at the 1948 Olympics consisting of Old Monktonians. The official history of the school's first hundred years can be found in A Goodly Heritage: A History of Monkton Combe School 1868–1967 by former Senior School master A. F. Lace, published in Bath by Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, 1968. The official history of the school's first 150 years can be found in A Delightful Inheritance by former Junior School headmaster Peter Leroy, published in 2017 by Monkton School Enterprises.
In 1795 Reeves published anonymously the first of his Thoughts on the English Government, addressed to the quiet good sense of the People of England in a series of Letters. Reeves claimed that "I am not a Citizen of the World...I am an Englishman".Sack, p. 181. In a controversial passage Reeves likened the monarchy to a tree: > ...the Government of England is a Monarchy; the Monarch is the antient stock > from which have sprung those goodly branches of the Legislature, the Lords > and Commons, that at the same time give ornament to the Tree, and afford > shelter to those who seek protection under it.
The house was finally finished by Hermanus, Pearl Buck's grandfather, and his son, Cornelius John, with the knowledge and fine craftsmanship they had learned from their ancestors, and the family moved into the house: "There at the edge of the settlement they built it, a goodly, twelve room house of wood, with smooth floors and plastered and paper wall, a city house" (The Exile, 29-30). The Stulting property Pearl Buck's mother, Caroline, often called "Carrie," was reared in this house. She married Absalom Sydenstricker, one of the nine children of Andrew and Frances Coffman Sydenstricker of Ronceverte, West Virginia. Shortly after their marriage, they left for China to become missionaries.
One is busy with a sukkah, one with a lulav. On the first day of Sukkot, all Israel stand in the presence of God with their palm-branches and etrogs in honor of God's name, and God tells them to let bygones be bygones; from now we begin a new account. Thus in Moses exhorts Israel: "You shall take on the first day [of Sukkot] the fruit of goodly trees, branches of palm trees and the boughs of thick trees, and willows of the brook; and you shall rejoice before the Lord your God." Rabbi Aha explained that the words, "For with You there is forgiveness," in signify that forgiveness waits with God from Rosh Hashanah onward.
The Citadel was notable for its absence at this pivotal moment in the history of the Flanaess, and their failure to take part in the Battle of Emridy Meadows contributed to the group's decline and eventual disbandment. After dispersing the Horde of Elemental Evil, the allied forces laid siege to the Temple of Elemental Evil itself, defeating it within a fortnight. Spellcasters loyal to the goodly army cooperated on a spell of sealing that bound the demoness Zuggtmoy (a major instigator in the Horde of Elemental Evil) to some of the deepest chambers in the castle's dungeons. The site itself remained, however, and over the following decade rumors of evil presence there persisted.
Though literature and oration were important aspects of Falkenau's studies, music was his passion. As a member of the Irving Literary Society, he was provided a venue for regular musical play. The Society was then in its fifteenth year of operation, and the following report of its May Day celebration, 1884, shows the manner in which various arts were integrated in this Cornell forum: > The May Day meeting of the Irving last Friday evening, was most highly > enjoyable to the goodly number, who were fortunate enough to be present. The > room had been tastefully decorated with evergreens, during the afternoon, > and the ladies of the society had provided flowers for the members and > visitors.
HMS Princess Louisa took part in the destruction of the fortress of San Lorenzo el Real Chagres (22-24 March 1740), in Panama, as part of a squadron commanded by Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon during the War of Jenkins' Ear. At 3 pm on 22 March 1740, the English squadron, composed of the ships Strafford, Norwich, Falmouth and Princess Louisa, the frigate , the bomb vessels , and , the fireships and , and transports Goodly and Pompey, under Vernon's command, began to bombard the Spanish fortress. Given the overwhelming superiority of the English forces, Captain Don Juan Carlos Gutiérrez Cevallos surrendered the fort on 24 March, after resisting for two days. Princess Louisa served until 1742, when she was broken up.
Woodcut for "Mirth" Besides the hymns that are "expected" in a book of hymns, Arthur Sherbo points out that the collection contains hymns "on learning and on 'good-nature to animals'."Sherbo p. 260 In particular, he emphasizes Hymn XXV "Mirth" as "showing anew the love for flowers that is a recurring characteristic of his poetry" as it reads: :If you are merry sing away, ::And touch the organs sweet; :This is the Lord's triumphant day, :Ye children in the gall'ries gay, ::Shout from each goodly seat. :It shall be May to-morrow's morn, ::A field then let us run, :And deck us in the blooming thorn, :Soon as the cock begins to warn, ::And long before the sun.
The words were written around 1860 while William Morris, then 26, was working as an apprentice in the office of the architect, Edmund Street, presumably under the persuasion of his fellow students who at that time had a taste for part-song.See The Work of William Morris: An Exhibition Arranged by the William Morris Society, (London, William Morris Society, 1962), p. 53 The architect and musician Edmund Sedding had at one point also been in the office of G. E. Street and he had discovered the tune at a meeting with the organist at Chartres Cathedral.Studwell It was included in Sedding's collection of Nine Antient and Goodly Carols for the Merry Tide of Christmas (1860).
The first classic of the year was the Gold Collar and Davesland, a 7-1 shot, won the final from the 1932 English Greyhound Derby champion Wild Woolley, now under the care of Harry Woolner. Coming home third was Gradual Rise for Harris at Harringay, this greyhound had broken the track record in the first round recording 32.32. Lemonition won the Grand National from the favourite Goodly News, the latter had recorded the fastest times in all three rounds leading up to the final. Former winners Long Hop and Scapegoat were both knocked out in earlier rounds, Long Hop would retire with a record of 49 wins from 85 races and a sixteen win sequence to his name.
Seitz is the author and editor of more than twenty books; he is best known for his volume on Isaiah 1—39 in Interpretation Commentary Series, held in 727 libraries according to WorldCat, and translated into Korean, Japanese and Italian. Other major works include Word Without End, Figured Out, Isaiah 40—66 (New Interpreter’s Bible), Prophecy and Hermeneutics, The Goodly Fellowship of the Prophets, and The Character of Christian Scripture. Recently, he has written a commentary on Colossians for the Brazos Theological Commentary series (2014), in which the place of the book in a wider Letter Collection is evaluated. A commentary on Joel for the new International Theological Commentary series appeared in 2016.
His barges > flew a black banner, bearing in its centre the triple imperial emblems of > the sun, and there were also dragon and phoenix flags flying on both side, > of his vessels. A goodly company of both sexes were in the attendance on > this person; there were female musicians, skilled in the use of string and > wind instruments. The banks of the canal were lined with crowds of > spectators, who witnessed with amazement and admiration his progress. The > 21st day of the last month happened to be this eunuch's birthday, so he > arrayed himself in dragon robes and stood on the foredeck of his barge, to > receive the homage of his suite.
Only try to throw such "sunshine in a shady place" > and all who attempt it will feel that Christmas tide may be made a hundred > fold happier than it was ever before. Her own children originally prompted her to provide gifts to the pauper children. The local press recorded many examples of her Christmas visits. In 1866 the Frome Times recorded her and her family bringing 'timely gifts' and 'a bountiful supply of Christmas fare' as well as 'superadded a goodly supply of XXX from the Lamb Brewery' In 1867 she asked for contributions from the townspeople for 'new cheap toys, or old broken ones', as 'great joys to enliven the dull workhouse life'.
"A Century of Lawmaking, p. 32-- Frustrated with the Congressional focus on black soldiers, Democratic Senator Willard Saulsbury of Delaware thought similarly: "But no sooner are we engaged in civil war ... than an attempt is made on every occasion to change the character of the war, and to elevate the miserable nigger, not only to political rights, but to put him in the Army, and to put him in your Navy." The racism that deemed blacks incapable of being skillful soldiers echoed in Congress. Although acknowledging blacks' competence with household chores, "[a] goodly number of Northerners agreed with Southerners that the black was a biologically inferior being and could not be trusted with important military responsibilities.
On coming in sight of the enemies' camp the Munster men "flinch from the fight in horror of the Clanna Neill", but stirred by the warning of Finnchu that not a homestead would be left to them if they did not fight, they gained the victory. Cairbre Cromm was then made king of Munster, but being dissatisfied with his appearance, as "his skin was scabrous", he besought Finnchu to bestow a goodly form on him, and the saint "obtained from God his choice of form for him". His shape and colour were then changed, so that he was afterwards Cairbre the Fair. After this Finnchu made a vow that he would not henceforth be the cause of any battles.
Parker taught that all persons are either of the "good seed" of God or of the "bad seed" of Satan (the children of the good seed are roughly equivalent to the "elect" of Calvinism, and those of the bad seed similar to the "non-elect"), and were predestined that way from the beginning. Therefore mission activity was not only unbiblical, but as a practical matter useless, since the "decision" was already made prior to birth. It seems that Parker spread his "two seeds" far and wide, and a goodly number of the "anti-missions" movement accepted his doctrine, though it never achieved anything near majority status. In 1834, Daniel Parker and others migrated to the Texas frontier.
The duty of saying grace after the meal is derived from : "And thou shalt eat and be satisfied and shalt bless the Lord thy God for the goodly land which he has given thee." Verse 8 of the same chapter says: "The land of wheat and barley, of the vine, the fig and the pomegranate, the land of the oil olive and of [date] syrup." Hence only bread made of wheat (which embraces spelt) or of barley (which for this purpose includes rye and oats) is deemed worthy of the blessing commanded in verse 10. After the meal, a series of four (originally three) benedictions are said, or a single benediction if bread was not eaten.
Reinold was a Benedictine monk who lived in the 10th century. Supposedly a direct descendant of Charlemagne, and the fourth son mentioned in the romantic poem Duke Aymon, by William Caxton.St. Reinold Catholic Online The poem is Caxton's translation of the long French Chanson de Geste, Les Quatre Fils Aymon (The Four Sons of Aymon), where Renaud de Montauban dies in an almost identical manner. Corpus of Middle English Prose and Text The right plesaunt and goodly historie of the foure sonnes of Aymon, Caxton, 1489 He began his religious life by entering the Benedictine monastery of Pantaleon in Cologne, Germany, where he was appointed head of a building project occurring in the abbey.
One of the few contemporary accounts of Richard Hore's life is contained in The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, a late 16th century history by Richard Hakluyt. Master Hore, described as "a man of goodly stature and of great courage" who was "given to the studie of Cosmographie," succeeded in attracting a number of gentlemen interested in visiting the North American coast. According to Hakluyt, the expedition was to set out on two ships: the Trinity, captained by Hore himself, and the Minion, upon which sailed men such as Armigil Wade. Hakluyt derived his narrative from two sources: the testimony of Thomas Butts, son of William Butts, and Oliver Dawbeny.
Their "right goodly lordship", as John Leland called it, extended over the parishes of Illogan, Redruth, and Camborne, the advowsons of which churches pertained to the manor of Tehidy, and the livings of which were occasionally held by some member of the family; but their wealth in later times was mainly derived from the enormous mineral riches of this part of Cornwall, although they also held considerable property in the north-eastern part of the county. The names of the earlier Bassets are little known in history, save that in the time of Henry VII (1485-1509) John Basset, Sheriff of Cornwall, found his posse commitatus too weak to suppress the Cornish rebellion of 1497 ("Flammock Rebellion").
The Revolution of 1848 echoed lastingly in this small castle village, which in 1815 already had 478 inhabitants. An eyewitness, master tinsmith Karl Luttenberger, later told the following: > One evening fire could be seen burning all round on the heights. Our > townsman Johann Schlamp III, a freedom-fighter captain, fetched himself the > Ries orchestra's big drum out of the dance hall, a wooden spoon from the > kitchen and worked his way through the laneways in such a way that he soon > had a goodly number of people behind him. Thereupon, a parade to the > Schloßberg ("Castle Mountain") formed… A militia was also formed, with wooden shotguns, who met one Sunday with those from Fürfeld and Wonsheim.
Frank Lawrence Owsley in Plain Folk of the Old South (1949) redefined the debate by starting with the writings of Daniel R. Hundley who in 1860 had defined the Southern middle class as "farmers, planters, traders, storekeepers, artisans, mechanics, a few manufacturers, a goodly number of country school teachers, and a host of half-fledged country lawyers, doctors, parsons, and the like." To find these people Owsley turned to the name-by-name files on the manuscript federal census. Owsley argued that Southern society was not dominated by planter aristocrats, but that yeoman farmers played a significant role in it. The religion, language, and culture of these common people created a democratic "plain folk" society.
Andrealphus > also appears as the 65th demon in the Goetia where he is described with > similar traits, but also including the ability to make men subtle in all > things pertaining to Mensuration, among other things. # Kimaris (also known > by the alternate names Cimeies, Cimejes and Cimeries) is most widely known > as the 66th demon of the first part of the Lemegeton (popularly known as the > Ars Goetia). He is described as a warrior riding a goodly black horse, and > possesses the abilities of locating lost or hidden treasures, teaching > trivium (grammar, logic and rhetoric) and making a man into a warrior of his > own likeness. He holds the rank of marquis, and is served by 20 legions.
As he wrote April 5, 1864, for the encouragement of immigration: "Besides all other reasons, I believe these honest, pious, plodding Swedes would form an excellent balance to the fickle, merry, light-hearted Irish, who are now crowding in such goodly numbers to our shores." After the Second war of Schleswig between Denmark and Prussia ended in 1864, Swedish volunteers coming back from Denmark wanted to go to America and continue fighting there in the American Civil War. Thomas solved this problem without asking his government for directions. He arranged with the captains of the Hamburg steamers to take these soldiers across the ocean at half price, and together with some friends he "made up a little purse" with which they could be sent to Hamburg.
The inscription on the rim of the chalice is to be read in two directions. From left to right, beginning with the central ankh is the full five-fold titulary of Tutankhamun: : May (he) live, the Horus Mighty Bull, beautiful of birth, the Two Ladies Goodly of Laws, who pacifies the Two Lands, the Horus of Gold Exalted of Crowns, who placates the gods, King of Upper and Lower Egypt and the Lord of the Two Lands Nebkheperure, given life. From right to left, beginning again with the ankh symbol, is the following: : May your ka live, may you spend millions of years, you, who love Thebes, sitting with your face to the north wind, your eyes beholding happiness.Nicholas Reeves, John H. Taylor: Howard Carter before Tutankhamun.
Soon after the second Nephite evacuation of Lehi-Nephi, these Nephites were en route to Zarahemla when they came to "a place which was called Mormon, having received its name from the king, being in the borders of the land having been infested, by times or at seasons, by wild beasts." This place of Mormon contained a beautiful. fountain of pure water" near which the prophet Alma—a fugitive from King Noah's court—"did hide himself in the daytime from the searches of the king" and preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ to "as many as believed him" (). "[A]fter many days," a "goodly number" of people had "gathered together at the place of Mormon, to hear the words of Alma.
"A goodly floor space, basic materials for play, and many children using them together" were the elements of a new kind of democratic education for children that guided Caroline Pratt to begin the City and Country School in 1914. Experiences teaching in a small independent school and two settlement houses had left Pratt questioning the value of an education in which "none of these children made any use of what they had learned." In contrast to her frustration was Pratt's observation of the meaningful world created by the young child of a friend while constructing a miniature railroad on the floor of his room. This child was not only enjoying himself, but he was also making sense of the world around him.
Fortress of San Lorenzo el Real Chagres After the destruction of Portobelo the previous November, Vernon proceeded to remove the last Spanish stronghold in the area. He attacked the fortress of San Lorenzo el Real Chagres, in present-day Panama on the banks of the Chagres River, near Portobelo. The fort was defended by Spanish patrol boats, and was armed with four guns and about thirty soldiers under Captain of Infantry Don Juan Carlos Gutiérrez Cevallos. At 3 pm on 22 March 1740, the British squadron, composed of the ships Stafford, Norwich, Falmouth and Princess Louisa, the frigate Diamond, the bomb vessels Alderney, Terrible, and Cumberland, the fireships Success and Eleanor, and transports Goodly and Pompey, under command of Vernon, began to bombard the Spanish fortress.
It may well have come from a poem written by Rudyard Kipling in 1902 entitled Sussex, the final stanza of which is: :God gives all men all earth to love, :But since man's heart is small, :Ordains for each one spot shall prove :Beloved over all. :Each to his choice, and I rejoice :The lot has fallen to me :In a fair groundThis phrase is taken from Psalm 16.1 in the Coverdale Bible - "The lot is fallen unto me in a fair ground : yea, I have a goodly heritage." – in a fair ground – :Yea, Sussex by the Sea! The song was published in 1907, and Captain Waithman performed it in concerts at Ballykinlar Camp in Ireland where the battalion was then stationed.
The combined waters of all three sisters are then visible all the way down the estuary from Cheekpoint on. In ancient times, the area bounded by the Suir and the Barrow formed the Kingdom of Ossory. This name is retained today for dioceses in both the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Ireland. The first, the gentle Shure that making way By sweet Clonmell, adorns rich Waterford; The next, the stubborne Newre, whose waters gray, By faire Kilkenny and Rosseponte boord, The third, the goodly Barow, which doth hoorde Great heaps of Salmons in his deepe bosome: All which long sundred, doe at last accord To ioyne in one, ere to the sea they come, So flowing all from one, all one at last become.
Samosapedia is a crowd-sourced South Asian language and culture website which provides a guide to the English words and phrases of South-East Asia. It has been mentioned by CNN,Sita Wadhwani, "Samosapedia: Best bloody diaspora desi dictionary in the world", CNN, 8 August 2011 The Economist,"The family tree of a mongrel language", The Economist, 9 August 2011 Huffington Post,Muneeza Naqvi, "Samosapedia, Crowd-Sourced Website, Helps Explain English As 'Goodly Spoken' In South Asia", Huffington Post, 18 August 2011 Live Mint,Supriya Nair, Live Mint 5 August 2011 The Wall Street Journal,Tripti Lahiri, "Six Contributions to ‘Samosapedia’", Wall Street Journal India, 11 August 2011 and other media outlets. It was founded in 2011 by Vikram Bhaskaran, Arun Ranganathan, Braxton Robbason and Arvind Thyagarajan.
HMS Strafford took part in the destruction of the fortress of San Lorenzo el Real Chagres (22-24 March 1740), in Panama, as part of a squadron commanded by Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon during the War of Jenkins' Ear. At 3 pm on 22 March 1740, the English squadron, composed of the ships Strafford, Norwich, Falmouth and Princess Louisa, the frigate , the bomb vessels , and , the fireships and , and transports Goodly and Pompey, under Vernon's command, began to bombard the Spanish fortress. Given the overwhelming superiority of the English forces, Captain Don Juan Carlos Gutiérrez Cevallos surrendered the fort on 24 March, after resisting for two days. Knowles Action at Havana, in 1748 She was at the Battle of Havana in 1748.
Hague provided the words of a fitting benediction as he reflected in 1885 on the continuing growth of his Fraternity: > "After more or less talk, the suggestions, most of them very good, took > shape, and Phi Sigma Kappa was the result. Only as yet, however, in embryo, > the seed grew, and little by little the goodly child of today is the fruit. > Let us trust it to keep on growing till it shall become a full grown man, > having the strength to help and protect its members, wisdom to guide them to > helpful and good things as to college life, and love so warm that all its > members shall feel its kindly glow, that brotherly love may indeed be a > reality and not an idea". (p.25) Rev.
As a Roman man, Antony is expected to fulfill certain qualities pertaining to his Roman masculine power, especially in the war arena and in his duty as a soldier: > Those his goodly eyes, That o'er the files and musters of the war Have > glowed like plated mars, now bend, now turn The office and devotion of their > view Upon a tawny front. His captain's heart, Which in the scuffles of > greatness hath burst The buckles on his breast, reneges all tempers, And is > becomes the bellows and the fan To cool a gipsy's lust.Antony and Cleopatra, > I.1.2–10 Cleopatra's character is slightly unpindown-able, as her character identity retains a certain aspect of mystery. She embodies the mystical, exotic, and dangerous nature of Egypt as the "serpent of old Nile".
Right Reverend Bishop Hendricken presided over the dedication, and this was followed by a Solemn High Mass. The sermon was by Reverend Father R.J. Barry of Hyde Park, who spoke in English and French from the text: "How goodly are thy tents, O Jacob, and thy tabernacles, O Israel." Father Boylan reorganized the Sunday School, over which he placed as its first Superintendent William J. McGrath, drawn from the ranks of the Christian Doctrine Society, and who held the position for a number of years. The first mission in the parish history was in October 1886 and lasted two weeks - the first for the English-speaking members conducted by Reverend Fathers McGrath and Fitzpatrick, the second for the French speaking members in charge of Reverend Fathers Bournigable and Lagier, of the Oblate Order from Lowell.
Marks granted the Written Torah alone divine status, refused to call himself rabbi but insisted on "reverend". He even translated the Kaddish into Hebrew, viewing Aramaic prayer as a later rabbinic corruption. In his new prayerbook and Passover Haggadah, he excised or reinstated various elements contrary to rabbinic tradition: the blessing on the Four species was changed from "who hath ordreth to take a frond", identified as such only by the Sages, to "goodly trees, palm, boughs and willows" (as in Leviticus 23:40); the Ten Commandments were read every Sabbath, a practice abolished in Talmudic times; and the blessings on lighting Hanukkah candles and reading the Scroll of Esther during Purim were rescinded, as they were not ordered by God. Mentions of demons and angels, also derived from extra-biblical sources, were discarded.
Draves' paternal grandfather Leopold Friedrich Johann Drews/Draves was born in Coburg, Germany January 10, 1848 and died January 12, 1904 in Dows, Iowa. Raised by what he called "goodly parents," ten-year-old Draves embraced the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (now called the Community of Christ) through baptism in 1922 at an RLDS reunion being held at North Platte, Nebraska. During his subsequent confirmation, Draves testified that the RLDS elder prophesied that he would have "a peculiar work to do among [his] Brethren", and that he "would behold Angels and be considered a prophet in God's Work." Days later, a "prophetess" at this same reunion reemphasized Draves' destiny to him, predicting that his mother would pass away exactly forty years from that date (August 11, 1922).
The Quran disclaims any superhuman characteristics for Muhammad but describes him as a man possessing the highest moral excellence (Quran "And thou dost, surely, possess sublime moral excellences"). God made him a good example or a "goodly model" for Muslims to follow (, and ), full of sympathy for Muslims ("Grievous to him is what you suffer; [he is] concerned over you and to the believers is kind and merciful" ). In Islamic tradition, Muhammad's relation to humanity is as a bringer of truth (God's message to humanity), and as a blessing (, and ) whose message will give people salvation in the afterlife. It is believed by at least one pious commentator that it is Muhammad's teachings and the purity of his personal life alone that keep alive the worship of God.
HMS Norwich took part in the destruction of the fortress of San Lorenzo el Real Chagres (22-24 March 1740), in Panama, as part of a squadron commanded by Vice-Admiral Edward Vernon during the War of Jenkins' Ear. At 3 pm on 22 March 1740, the English squadron, composed of the ships Strafford, Norwich, Falmouth and Princess Louisa, the frigate , the bomb vessels , and , the fireships and , and transports Goodly and Pompey, under Vernon's command, began to bombard the Spanish fortress. Given the overwhelming superiority of the English forces, Captain Don Juan Carlos Gutiérrez Cevallos surrendered the fort on 24 March, after resisting for two days. In 1743 as part of a squadron commanded by Commodore Charles Knowles participated in the failed attacks to La Guayra and Puerto Cabello.
About north-north west of the village, on the eastern face of Marcle Ridge, a massive landslip, estimated at , took place over three days starting on 17 February 1575. Named "The Wonder", it was so large that full-grown trees were carried down the slope onto an adjoining property. In his book The Natural History of Selborne, Gilbert White (1720–93) quotes the words of John Philips: > I nor advise, nor reprehend the choice > Of Marcley Hill; the apple nowhere finds > A kinder mould; yet 'tis unsafe to trust > Deceitful ground; who knows but that once more > This mount may journey, and his present site > Forsaken, to thy neighbour's bounds transfer > Thy goodly plants, affording matter strange > For law debates! > In Victorian times, people came from far and wide to view "The Wonder".
The first rehearsal of the new society was held on 21 September 1866, with an arrangement to hold weekly practices in the Old Assembly Rooms, Full Street. By this time the society had about 120 members. The Derby Mercury, dated 26 September 1866, recorded that: "We trust that the gentlemen of the Town will come forward liberally with subscriptions in aid of the society’s funds; for, although the Choral Union is to a certain extent self-supporting, it must be borne in mind that unless a goodly number of honorary members are enrolled the committee will not be justified in incurring the heavy expenses inevitable on a Grand Oratorio performance." On 1 February 1867, the choir gave an "open rehearsal" of Handel's oratorio Judas Maccabaeus at the Corn Exchange.
The first recorded ascent of Prospect Hill by a colonist is that of Tench and his party on 26 June 1789. While there is no documentary evidence of Tench having named Prospect Hill, there is no doubt that it is in fact the hill that was shortly afterwards known by that name. In view of Tench's literary allusions to Milton's Paradise Lost, it seems highly probable that the experience of climbing it reminded him of the "goodly prospect of some forein land first- seen" by Milton's scout and that it was indeed Tench who first named it. The earliest written reference to the name Prospect Hill is probably the account of an after-dinner walk from Parramatta to the hill by Governor Phillip and Lieutenant (later Governor) Philip Gidley King in April 1790.
In his 1562 narrative poem The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet, Arthur Brooke translated Boaistuau faithfully but adjusted it to reflect parts of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde. There was a trend among writers and playwrights to publish works based on Italian novelle—Italian tales were very popular among theatre-goers—and Shakespeare may well have been familiar with William Painter's 1567 collection of Italian tales titled Palace of Pleasure. This collection included a version in prose of the Romeo and Juliet story named "The goodly History of the true and constant love of Romeo and Juliett". Shakespeare took advantage of this popularity: The Merchant of Venice, Much Ado About Nothing, All's Well That Ends Well, Measure for Measure, and Romeo and Juliet are all from Italian novelle.
About its location, the 1904 Victoria History of the County of Bedford: Volume 3 says: :There was at one time in Melchbourne a preceptory of the Knights of Jerusalem. Its site can still be traced to the south of the Cottage, and it is thus described by Leland, writing in the 16th century:— 'Here is a right fair place of square stone standing much upon pillared vaults of stone, and there be goodly gardens orchards and ponds and a parke thereby.' The Knights Hospitallers had the right to hold a weekly market on Friday, and an annual fair on the vigil, feast and morrow of St. Mary Magdalene. The site of the old market cross is at the junction of the lane from the village with the road to Knotting.
For a list of the Parliaments of Queen Elizabeth, see , for a list of the Parliaments of James I and the early Parliaments of Charles I, see Hinchingbrooke House He entertained King James at Hinchingbrooke on 27 April 1603, when the King was travelling south to occupy the English throne. Cromwell's presents to the King included "a cup of gold, goodly horses, deep- mouthed hounds, and divers hawks of excellent wing" and a some of the heads of Cambridge University came dressed in scarlet gowns and corner caps to present a Latin oration. It was described as "the greatest feast that had ever been given to a king by a subject". In gratitude King James conferred the Order of the Bath upon Cromwell at the coronation on 24 July 1603.
In particular a scene of its fifth book: "And Eurypylus, son of Euaemon, slew goodly Hypsenor, son of Dolopion high of heart, that was made priest of Scamander, and was honoured of the folk even as a god —upon him did Eurypylus, Euaemon's glorious son, rush with his sword as he fled before him, and in mid-course smite him upon the shoulder and lop off his heavy arm. So the arm all bloody fell to the ground; and down over his eyes came dark death and mighty fate." The word play derives from the Greek language word "porphyra" (or porphura, πορφύρα) for the purple-red dye of the imperial robes. In the Iliad the word signifies "dark red, purple or crimson", the color of blood in the various scenes of death in battle.
The first use of the word pilgrims for the Mayflower passengers appeared in William Bradford's Of Plymouth Plantation. As he finished recounting his group's July 1620 departure from Leiden, he used the imagery of Hebrews 11:13–16 about Old Testament "strangers and pilgrims" who had the opportunity to return to their old country but instead longed for a better, heavenly country. > So they lefte [that] goodly & pleasante citie, which had been ther resting > place, nere 12 years; but they knew they were pilgrimes, & looked not much > on these things; but lift up their eyes to ye heavens, their dearest > cuntrie, and quieted their spirits. There is no record of the term Pilgrims being used to describe Plymouth's founders for 150 years after Bradford wrote this passage, except when quoting him.
1611-2011: Four hundred years of the King James Bible (King's Lynn: The Testimony, 2011). Carr's academic and professional publications include Anarchism in France: the case of Octave Mirbeau (1977) (based on his M.A. thesis), The Mandrake Press, 1929-30 (Cambridge University Library, 1985), An Introduction to University Library Administration (Clive Bingley, 1987, joint publication) and The Academic Research Library in a Decade of Change (Chandos, 2007), as well as numerous articles in both professional and academic journals. He has co-authored a comprehensive analysis of the use of the word 'Spirit' in the New Testament,Spirit in the New Testament, with Edward Whittaker (Norwich: The Testimony, 1985). and has written a study guide to the Biblical book of Micah, a collection of essays on Christadelphian faith, life and history,A Goodly Heritage (Birmingham: The Testimony, 2012).
In the Art of Limning he cautioned against all but the minimal use of chiaroscuro modelling that we see in his works, reflecting the views of his patron Elizabeth: "seeing that best to show oneself needeth no shadow of place but rather the open light ... Her Majesty .. chose her place to sit for that purpose in the open alley of a goodly garden, where no tree was near, nor any shadow at all ..."Quotation from Hilliard's Art of Limming, c. 1600, in Strong (1975), p.24 He emphasises the need to catch "the grace in countenance, in which the affections appear, which can neither be well used nor well-judged of but by the wiser sort". So the "wise drawer" should "watch" and "catch these lovely graces, witty smilings, and these stolen glances which suddenly like lightning pass and another countenance taketh place".
Middlewich is a deanery, hath burgesses, and other privileges, as the rest of the Wiches have. Half a mile N. E. from the town is the goodly manor-place of Kinderton, belonging to Lord Vernon, called The Barn of Kinderton. The town is well build, and a desirable place of residence not only for pleasantness of situation, but, what is far better, for the friendly and hospitable disposition of its inhabitants. The directory goes on to list 4 esquires, 3 gentleman, 4 attorneys, 3 surgeons, a cheese factor, two publicans (of the Kings Arms and the White Bear), a school master, 2 haberdashers, a chandler, 2 tanners, 3 salt proprietors, 3 mercers, 2 clock makers, a timber merchant, a medicine vendor, a grocer, a book seller, a glazier and a keeper of the house of correction.
He had even carried this success into England, and made John Knox as popular there as he was at first, when he was the friend and assistant of Cranmer, the chaplain of Edward VI, and the solicited but recusant object of an English mitre. But wider and wider still the circle of intelligence upon the character of the Scottish reformer had been expanded, until the pious and reflective of Europe at large were enabled to perceive, and obliged to confess, that the ruthless demolisher of goodly architecture, which every other country had spared, was neither an illiterate Goth nor a ferocious Vandal, but one of those illustrious few of whom history is so justly proud. All this was much, but it was not yet the utmost which Dr. M'Crie had effected. Knox had, as it were, been recalled to life, and sent once more upon his momentous mission.
' There was a raising of the platform heights 'fully a foot the whole length' in 1886, the local newspaper reporting 'a goodly number of men being engaged on the work.'The Bolton Chronicle, Saturday 16 January 1886 The working goods yard at the station was a crucial part of a country station's existence and two surviving memos sent in 1874 to Bromley Cross refer to the delivery of cheese and tins of lard etc. to the local Co-op stores and also that goods despatched could have problems; 'all in this truck very wet when received here.'L&YR; (Salford Stn) and also L&NWR; (Broad St.) memos, dated July and Oct 1874, sent to Bromley Cross. At file ZZ354, Bolton Central Library Plans were drawn up around 1891 for an extension to the warehouse, with new goods offices and other track and signalling works.
In a 1930 speech, as president-elect he stated: > The glory of a university is obviously the men who constitute its faculty. > It cannot be too often repeated that it is men, and nothing but men, who > make education. The reason why the University of California occupies the > high position it does throughout the academic world is that there has never > been a time when its faculty could not boast of men who were finding their > way along rough trails, illuminated only by the spark of genius, to the > heights of scholarship. Within a few years after the receipt of its charter > from the state there were to be found in the University a goodly number of > men whose reputation is even yet undimmed, such men as Daniel Coit Gilman, > later president of Johns Hopkins University, Hilgard in agriculture, LeConte > in geology, and many others.
The wall painting depicts Maitreya, the Buddha of the future and successor to the historical Buddha, enthroned in heaven and awaiting his incarnation on earth where he will save the souls of lost humanity. Maitreya himself is the central figure but he is joined by a goodly retinue of greater and lesser bodhisattvas and monks (arhats, or 'luohan' in Chinese). According to the Indian Buddhist tradition, Maitreya will be born in to the Kingdom of Ketumati, whose King and Queen are depicted here, at the far left and right, 'taking the tonsure' (i.e., having their heads shaved) as a sign of their conversion to Buddhism. The Paradise of Maitreya, which measures approximately 16 (height) x 36 (width) feet, is known to have come from the Monastery of Joyful Conversion (Xinghua Si) in southern Shanxi Province, which has long since been destroyed after falling into ruins.
While Greek mythology is used to express Spenser's undying love, symbols of Christianity are used to express his intimate feelings. "How the red roses flush up in her cheekes, And the pure snow with goodly vermill stayne, Like crimsin dyde in grayne, That even th'Angels which continually, About the sacred Altare doe remaine, Forget their service and about her fly, Ofte peeping in her face that seemes more fayre," Spenser comments how Elizabeth is so beautiful to him that even the Angels would come down to Earth to look at her. She is the virgin to be sacrificed, for all to learn from. "She commeth in, before th'almighties vew: Of her ye virgins learne obedience, When so ye come into those holy places, To humble your proud faces; Bring her up to th'high altar that she may, The sacred ceremonies there partake, The which do endlesse matrimony make," The virginity being taken is sacrificial, but not in the form of Elizabeth dying for a cause.
Dom DeMarco cutting a Sicilian pie at DiFara's In his 1998 book The Eclectic Gourmet Guide to Greater New York City, Jim Leff called the sauce used by the restaurant: > a restrained, low profile masterpiece of optimal acidity and spicing > (bolstered by a goodly shake of black pepper). Like everything here it's > delicious in a magically old-fashioned way. Since The Village Voice, a New York City newspaper in Lower Manhattan, put DeMarco on its cover and proclaimed it as one of the "Best Italian restaurants", Di Fara has been regarded as a top pizzeria by publications like the Daily News. Di Fara has received many awards, and has been labeled the "Best... pizza in New York" several times by many publications, including New York and the online publication Serious Eats. In 2004, The New York Times critic Eric Asimov called it "surely the best by-the-slice pizza in New York", and in 2006, The New York Sun called it "the city's finest pizza".
Note that this passage talks about the methods used by Shaka, the Zulu king that established the Zulu as a regional power and Cetshwayo's great uncle: As he conquered a tribe, he enrolled its remnants in his army, so that they might in their turn help to conquer others. He armed his regiments with the short stabbing assegai, instead of the throwing assegai which they had been accustomed to use, and kept them subject to an iron discipline. If a man was observed to show the slightest hesitation about coming to close quarters with the enemy, he was executed as soon as the fight was over. If a regiment had the misfortune to be defeated, whether by its own fault or not, it would on its return to headquarters find that a goodly proportion of the wives and children belonging to it had been beaten to death by Chaka's orders, and that he was waiting their arrival to complete his vengeance by dashing out their brains.
Other lodges in the Indiana Territory founded by the Grand Lodge of Kentucky were Madison (1815), Charlestown (1816), Melchizedek in Salem (1817), Pisgah in Corydon, Lawrenceburg, Rising Sun, and Vevay (1817). On May 9, 1817, the Grand Lodge of Ohio granted a dispensation for Brookville Harmony Lodge in Brookville, Indiana; this lodge would remain under the Grand Lodge of Ohio for two years following the founding of Indiana's Grand Lodge.Smith, Dwight L. Goodly Heritage (Grand Lodge F. & A.M. of Indiana, 1968) pg.6,8,9,11 After Indiana attained statehood, it qualified for its own Grand Lodge. While attending the annual meeting of the Grand Lodge of Kentucky in September 1817, members of several lodges within the new state agreed to meet in Corydon with representative from all lodges and discuss the viability of forming a Grand Lodge with the State of Indiana. On December 3, 1817, discussion began as to whether a Grand Lodge for Indiana should be formed, 354 days after Indiana gained statehood.
Tradition made the penestae descendants of the Achaeans subjected by invading tribes arriving from Thesprotia. Archemachus (cited by Athenaeus, VI, 264), a 3rd-century BC writer, believed instead that they were Boeotians: > "The Aeolian Boeotians who did not emigrate when their country Thessaly was > conquered by the Thessalians, surrendered themselves to the victors on > condition that they should not be carried out of the country, nor be put to > death, but should cultivate the land for the new owners of the soil, paying > by way of rent a portion of the produce of it, and many of them are richer > than their masters." The Thessalian lands were very productive and spacious with a low population density; the penestae thus had goodly amounts of rich land to cultivate. The contributions given to the Thessalians and Archemachus' remark about their wealth imply that the penestae could freely dispose of the portions in excess of their rent payments and that they could possess goods.
Like other high commissions on which he had served, it was a secular court composed of both clergy and leading members of the laity such as the Earl of Derby, Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire and a cousin of the queen, and Sir John Southworth, High Sheriff of Lancashire in 1562 and MP for the county in the following year. Southworth was uncompromising in his attachment to Roman Catholicism and in 1566 his recusancy resulted in Downham bringing charges against him. Southworth refused to answer to Downham or to Archbishop Young, contending that he would "not find indifference at their hands", and the case was referred to the Privy Council.For Downham’s dealings with Southworth, see William A. Abram, A History of Blackburn Town and Parish (Blackburn, 1877), pp. 76-78. Southworth was High Sheriff of Lancashire in 1562; Downham considered him one who "if he could be reclaimed others would follow in embracing the Queen’s Majesty’s most goodly proceeding" (John Harland, ed.
Muriel (played by Estelle Harris; young Muriel played by Ashley Tisdale in flashback in the episode "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad Hotel") – The saucy hotel maid who conceals her goodly nature beneath a veneer of acidic sarcasm, and spends more time sneaking in naps and robbing guests of loose change than doing any actual cleaning. She is a constant presence in Carey and the twins' suite, ostensibly "babysitting" but loitering on their couch watching TV and eating chocolates long after Carey has returned home. In "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad Hotel", the cast discovers that Muriel once dated mobster Alphonse "Hot Peppers" DeLeo before joining the Tipton in 1938; Maddie and the twins easily spot her in an old newspaper clipping when they notice that the young lady in the picture is sitting with her feet up. In "Big Hair & Baseball", Muriel claims that she knew Babe Ruth and was the first one to call him "Babe".
Militarism is featured in Naphtali's history. In the ancient Song of Deborah, Naphtali is commended, along with Zebulun, for risking their lives in the fight against Sisera; in the prose account of the event, which Arthur Peake regards as a much later narrative based on the poem,Jewish Encyclopedia, Song of Deborah' there is the addition that Barak, the leader of the anti-Sisera forces, hails from the tribe of Naphtali. In the Gideon narrative Naphtali are one of the tribes which join in an attack against Midianite invaders, though Arthur Peake regards the Gideon narrative as being spliced together from at least three earlier texts, the oldest of which describes only personal vengeance by Gideon and 300 men of his own clan, not a battle in which the rest of the northern tribes join him.Jewish Encyclopedia, Gideon In the Blessing of Jacob, which textual scholars date to 700-600 BC - and thus a postdiction, Naphtali is compared to a hind let loose, and commended for giving goodly words.
Of these as they grazed the North Wind became enamoured, and he likened himself to a dark-maned stallion and covered them; and they conceived, and bare twelve fillies These, when they bounded over the earth, the giver of grain, would course over the topmost ears of ripened corn and break them not, and whenso they bounded over the broad back of the sea, would course over the topmost breakers of the hoary brine. And Erichthonius begat Tros to be king among the Trojans, and from Tros again three peerless sons were born, Ilus, and Assaracus, and godlike Ganymedes that was born the fairest of mortal men; wherefore the gods caught him up on high to be cupbearer to Zeus by reason of his beauty, that he might dwell with the immortals. And Ilus again begat a son, peerless Laomedon, and Laomedon begat Tithonus and Priam and Clytius, and Hicetaon, scion of Ares. And Assaracus begat Capys, and he Anchises; but Anchises begat me and Priam goodly Hector.
In Poly- Olbion (first published in 1612) the poet Michael Drayton described the journey taken by the River Thames to the sea: > :As still his goodly traine yet every houre increast, :And from the Surrian > shores cleer Wey came down to meet :His Greatnes, whom the Tames so > gratiously doth greet :That with the Fearne-crown'd Flood he Minion-like > doth play: :Yet is not this the Brook, entiseth him to stay. :But as they > thus, in pompe, came sporting on the shole, :Gainst Hampton-Court he meets > the soft and gentle Mole. :Whose eyes so pierc't his breast, that seeming to > foreslowe :The way which he so long intended was to go, :With trifling up > and down, he wandreth here and there; :And that he in her sight, transparent > might appeare, :Applyes himselfe to Fords, and setteth his delight, :On that > which might make him gratious in her sight.Poly-Olbion, Song XVII lines > 20-32 :But Tames would hardly on: oft turning back to show, :For his much > loved Mole how loth he was to go.
The other facts that could be drawn from the instrument are that William Barrett was unmarried and that he died somewhere "beyond the seas" from England. Map showing St Martin-in-the-Fields, circa 1562, where Mary and William Dyer were married in 1633 That Mary was well educated is apparent from the two surviving letters that she wrote. Quaker chronicler George Bishop described her as a "Comely Grave Woman, and of a goodly Personage ... and one of a good Report, having a husband of an Estate, fearing the Lord, and a Mother of Children." The Dutch writer Gerard Croese wrote that she was reputed to be a "person of no mean extract and parentage, of an estate pretty plentiful, of a comely stature and countenance, of a piercing knowledge in many things, of a wonderful sweet and pleasant discourse, so fit for great affairs..." Massachusetts Governor John Winthrop described her as being "a very proper and fair woman...of a very proud spirit, and much addicted to revelations".
Here is an example of it in its earliest development: :And thus the lone day in fight they spend, :Till, at the last, as everything hath end, :Anton is shent, and put him to the flight, :And all his folk to go, as best go might." This way of writing was misunderstood and neglected by Chaucer's English disciples, but was followed nearly a century later by the Scottish poet, called Blind Harry (c. 1475), whose The Actes and Deidis of the Illustre and Vallyeant Campioun Schir William Wallace holds an important place in the history of versification as having passed on the tradition of the heroic couplet. Another Scottish poet, Gavin Douglas, selected heroic verse for his translation of the Aeneid (1513), and displayed, in such examples as the following, a skill which left little room for improvement at the hands of later poets: :One sang, "The ship sails over the salt foam, :Will bring the merchants and my leman home"; :Some other sings, "I will be blithe and light, :Mine heart is leant upon so goodly wight.
Before the 1969 revision of the Roman Missal, the phrase mysterium fidei was included in the formula of consecration of the wine spoken inaudibly by the priest, appearing as follows (here accompanied by an unofficial English translation):Canon of the Mass :::Text (in Latin) :Simili modo postquam cenatum est, :accipiens et hunc praeclarum calicem :in sanctas ac venerabiles manus suas: :item tibi gratias agens, benedixit, :deditque discipulis suis, dicens: :Accipite, et bibite ex eo omnes. :Hic est enim calix sanguinis mei, :novi et aeterni testamenti: :mysterium fidei: :qui pro vobis et pro multis effundetur :in remissionem peccatorum. :Haec quotiescumque feceritis, :in mei memoriam facietis. ::Unofficial English translation :In like manner, after He had supped, :taking also into His holy and venerable hands :this goodly chalice, :again giving thanks to Thee, He blessed it, :and gave it to His disciples, saying: :Take and drink ye all of this: :For this is the chalice of My blood, :of the new and eternal testament: :the mystery of faith: :which will be shed for you and for many :unto the remission of sins.
It is incumbent upon the Guardian of the Cause of God to appoint in his own life-time him that shall become his successor, that differences may not arise after his passing. He that is appointed must manifest in himself detachment from all worldly things, must be the essence of purity, must show in himself the fear of God, knowledge, wisdom and learning. Thus, should the first-born of the Guardian of the Cause of God not manifest in himself the truth of the words: – "The child is the secret essence of its sire," that is, should he not inherit of the spiritual within him (the Guardian of the Cause of God) and his glorious lineage not be matched with a goodly character, then must he, (the Guardian of the Cause of God) choose another branch to succeed him. :The Hands of the Cause of God must elect from their own number nine persons that shall at all times be occupied in the important services in the work of the Guardian of the Cause of God.
The lofty Gate-house, with four Turrets, looking Northwards, on the right hand thereof, without the ditch, a goodly building containing two fair courts; before them was the Grange, severed by a wall and common road, etc. Some idea of the magnitude of the place may be found when it is remembered that from a survey made in 1798 the area of the works including gardens and entrenchments, covered about fourteen and a half acres. The siege, which has rendered the name of Basing House famous, commenced in August, 1643, when it was held for the King by John Paulet, 5th Marquis of Winchester, who retired hither in the vain hope that "integrity and privacy might have here preserved his peace" but in this he was deceived, and was compelled to stand upon his guard, which with his gentlemen armed with six muskets he did so well that twice he repulsed the attempts of the "Roundheads" to take possession. On 31 July 1643, the King, on the petition of the Marquis, sent one hundred musketeers, under Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Peake, to form a garrison.
The first European explorer to see tule elk was likely Sir Francis Drake who landed in July 1579 probably in today's Drake's Bay, Marin County, California: "The inland we found to be far different from the shoare, a goodly country and fruitful soil, stored with many blessings fit for the use of man: infinite was the company of very large and fat deer, which there we saw by thousands as we supposed in a herd..." A more definitive second encounter 16 years later was described by Sebastian Rodriguez Cermeño, who was shipwrecked in December 1595, and in Drake's Bay with certainty. Cermeño's account described "deer walking about, the largest ever found, as could be seen by the antlers, of which the Captain carried away a sample". On a trip inland they found "a great quantity of deer horns, one of which, measured before this witness, showed sixteen palmas [11 feet] from point to point." Cermeno and his crew made a small boat from their wrecked Manila galleon and sailed back to Acapulco, Mexico with but a single trophy of their voyage to the Philippines, the set of large elk antlers.
See Baal for a discussion of this passage. says: This could mean that Yahweh judges along with many other gods as one of the council of the high god Ēl. However it can also mean that Yahweh stands in the Divine Council (generally known as the Council of Ēl), as Ēl judging among the other members of the Council. The following verses in which the god condemns those whom he says were previously named gods (Elohim) and sons of the Most High suggest the god here is in fact Ēl judging the lesser gods. An archaic phrase appears in , kôkkêbê ’ēl 'stars of God', referring to the circumpolar stars that never set, possibly especially to the seven stars of Ursa Major. The phrase also occurs in the Pyrgi Inscription as hkkbm ’l (preceded by the definite article h and followed by the m-enclitic). Two other apparent fossilized expressions are arzê-’ēl 'cedars of God' (generally translated something like 'mighty cedars', 'goodly cedars') in (in Hebrew verse 11) and kêharrê-’ēl 'mountains of God' (generally translated something like 'great mountains', 'mighty mountains') in (in Hebrew verse 6).
"'Miracle Worker' playwright William Gibson dies," November 28, 2008. He adapted the work again for the 1962 film version, receiving an Academy Award nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay; the same actresses who previously had won Tony Awards for their performances in the stage version, Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke, received Academy Awards for the film version as well. Arthur Penn directed both the stage and film versions. His other works include Dinny and the Witches (1948, revised 1961), in which a jazz musician incurs the wrath of three Shakespearean witches by blowing a riff which stops time; the book for the musical version of Clifford Odets' Golden Boy (1964), which earned him yet another Tony nomination; A Mass for the Dead (1968), an autobiographical family chronicle; A Cry of Players (1968), a speculative account of the life of young William Shakespeare (with Anne Bancroft starring for Gibson, this time as Shakespeare's wife, Anne Hathaway); "American Primitive" (1969) a verse play adapted from the letters of John and Abigail Adams, premiered at Williamstown Theatre Festival, directed by Frank Langella and starring Anne Bancroft; Goodly Creatures (1980), about Puritan dissident Anne Hutchinson; and Monday After the Miracle (1982), a continuation of the Helen Keller story.

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