Flowers from a Persian Garden and Other Papers by W. A. Clouston
page 306 of 355 (86%)
page 306 of 355 (86%)
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Ready, when Dido gave the word, To be advanced into the halter, Without the benefit on's Psalter. * * * * * Then 'cause she would, to part the sweeter, A portion have of Hopkins' metre, As people use at execution, For the decorum of conclusion, Being too sad to sing, she says.[157] [157] _Scarronides; or, Virgil Travestie_, etc., by Charles Cotton, Book iv. _Poetical Works_, 5th edition, London, 1765, pp. 122, 140. If the clergy in medieval times had, as they are said to have had, all the learning among themselves, what a blessed state of ignorance must the laity have been in! And so, indeed, it appears, for there is extant an old Act of Parliament which provides that a nobleman shall be entitled to the "benefit of clergy," even though he could not read. And another law sets forth that "the command of the sheriff to his officer by word of mouth, and without writing is good; for it may be that neither the sheriff nor his officer can write or read!" Many charters are preserved to which persons of great dignity, even kings, have affixed the sign of the cross, because they were not able to write their names, and hence the term of _signing_, instead of subscribing. In this respect a ten-year-old Board School boy in these "double-distilled" days is vastly superior to the most renowned of the "barons bold." |
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