| Sharon Turner - 1839 - 532 pages
...advise them to be silent concerning the kings of the Britons, since they have not that book written in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Bretagne, and which being a true history, published in honor of those princes, I have thus taken care... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1841 - 428 pages
...but I advise them to be silent concerning the British kihgs, since they have not that book written in the British tongue which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain." Well might Geoffry exult. He possessed the sole copy ever found in both the Britains. The... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1841 - 400 pages
...but I advise them to be silent concerning the British kings, since they have not that book written in the British tongue which Walter, Archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain." Well might Geoffry exult. He possessed the sole copy ever found in both the Britains. The... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1841 - 426 pages
...but I advise them to be silent concerning the British kings, since they have not that book written in the British tongue which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain." Well might Geoffry exult. He possessed the sole copy ever found in both the Britains. The... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1842 - 364 pages
...but I advise them to be silent concerning the British kings, since they have not that book written in the British tongue which Walter, Archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain." Well might Geoffry exult. He possessed the sole copy ever found in both the Britains. The... | |
| Geoffrey (of Monmouth, Bishop of St. Asaph) - 1842 - 332 pages
...advise them to be silent concerning the kings of the Britons, since they have not that book written in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain, and which being a true history, published in honour of those princes, I have thus taken care... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - 1842 - 366 pages
...but I advise them to be silent concerning the British kings, since they have not that book written in the British tongue which Walter, Archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britain." Well might Geoffry exult. He possessed the sole copy ever found in both the Britains. The... | |
| John Allen Giles, Gildas - 1848 - 542 pages
...ferment and corrupt the whole mass. 3. It relates stories utterly at variance with acknowledged history. in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Brittany, and which being a true history, published in honour of those princes, I have thus taken care... | |
| John Allen Giles - 1848 - 552 pages
...feiment and corrupt the whole mass. 3. It relates stories utterly at variance with acknowledged history. in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Brittany, and which being a true history, published in honour of those princes, I have thus taken care... | |
| Roger (of Wendover), Matthew Paris - 1849 - 590 pages
...the latter to be silent respecting the kings of the Britons, since they have not that book written in the British tongue, which Walter, archdeacon of Oxford, brought out of Britanny, and which, being a true history in honour of those princes, I have thus taken care to translate... | |
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