A pocket companion for Oxford. [Entitled] A new pocket companion for Oxford: or, Guide through the University1804 |
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Page 1
... will hardly be fur- paffed by any in the kingdom . King Henry I. built a Royal Palace on a fpot called Beaumont , on the weft fide of the city , remains of which are still seen . King Richard I. called Cœur de Lion , was born A King.
... will hardly be fur- paffed by any in the kingdom . King Henry I. built a Royal Palace on a fpot called Beaumont , on the weft fide of the city , remains of which are still seen . King Richard I. called Cœur de Lion , was born A King.
Page 2
King Richard I. called Cœur de Lion , was born in this palace . The ... Henry III . the University is faid to have confifted of dou- ble that number ... King Henry VIII . in 1542 . The fituation is on an eminence , rifing gradually from ...
King Richard I. called Cœur de Lion , was born in this palace . The ... Henry III . the University is faid to have confifted of dou- ble that number ... King Henry VIII . in 1542 . The fituation is on an eminence , rifing gradually from ...
Page 30
... of Wykeham , the Founder of the two St. Mary Winton Colleges ; that in the middle , St. Mary Magdalen , to whom the College is dedicated ; the next , in a kneeling pofture , King Henry III . who refounded the Hofpital which was ...
... of Wykeham , the Founder of the two St. Mary Winton Colleges ; that in the middle , St. Mary Magdalen , to whom the College is dedicated ; the next , in a kneeling pofture , King Henry III . who refounded the Hofpital which was ...
Page 38
... King Henry VI . who advanced him to the bishopric of Winchester in the year 1447 , and in 1449 he was conftituted Lord High Chancellor of England . In the year 1456 he ob- tained leave of King Henry VI . to convert St. John's Hofpital ...
... King Henry VI . who advanced him to the bishopric of Winchester in the year 1447 , and in 1449 he was conftituted Lord High Chancellor of England . In the year 1456 he ob- tained leave of King Henry VI . to convert St. John's Hofpital ...
Page 45
... of the work . The altar - piece is a copy of the Salvator Mundi , a celebrated ... King Alfred , the Founder of the College , executed by Wilton , from a model ... Henry IV . and Robert Dudley , Earl of Leicester , two Benefactors to the ...
... of the work . The altar - piece is a copy of the Salvator Mundi , a celebrated ... King Alfred , the Founder of the College , executed by Wilton , from a model ... Henry IV . and Robert Dudley , Earl of Leicester , two Benefactors to the ...
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Common terms and phrases
adorned alfo alſo Altar Ante-chapel beautiful befides benefactors Biſhop Buft building Chancellor Chapel Chrift Church Cloifter College confiderable confifts Corinthian Order court D. D. Late defign ditto Duke of Marlborough eaft Earl Earl of Litchfield eaſt elegant erected Exhibitioners expence fame feet 6 inches feet high feet long Fellows feven feveral figures fince finiſhed firft firſt fituated fociety fome Founder fouth fide fpacious fquare ftands ftatue ftone ftory ftucco ftyle fuperb fupported furniſhed garden Gothic Hall handfome Harcourt houfe houſe inches high Ionic order Landſcape Late and preſent Library Lord Mafter Magdalen Magdalen College marble Merton College moft moſt north fide oppofite Oriel College ornamented Oxford painted portraits prefent Prefident principal Profeffor Provoft purchaſed quadrangle Queen reft repreſents Roman Rubens Scholars Sir Nathaniel Lloyd ſmall thefe theſe Thomas Bodley Titian Univerſity Vafes Vandyck Vifitor wainſcotted weft whofe William Wincheſter
Popular passages
Page 156 - The penfive fecrecy of defert Cell; And Wifdom's felf Oft feeks to fweet retired Solitude, Where with her beft nurfe, Contemplation, She plumes her Feathers, and lets grow her Wings, That in the various Buftle of Refort Were all too
Page 159 - the blooming pride of May And that of Beauty are but one ; At Morn both flourifh, bright and gay, Both fade at Evening, pale and gone. THE URN, Placed on an altar, encircled with Cyprefles, ftands within a Recefs in the Shrubbery that
Page 157 - Pan, Knit with the Graces and the Hours in Dance, Leads on th' eternal Spring. MILTON. BUST OF VENUS. Thee, Goddefs, thee the Clouds and Tempefts fear, And at thy pleafing prefence difappear : For thee the Land in fragrant
Page 32 - Both of them to' gether exprefs to us the complete character of a ' good governor of a College. Accordingly they ' are placed under the window of thofe lodgings * which originally belonged to the Prefident, as the * inftru&ions they convey ought particularly to re* gulate his conduct.
Page 55 - And, though it is now ftyled Hertford College, it may be called by the name of any other perfon, who will complete the endowment of it, or become the principal benefactor to it. This College confifts of a Principal, two fenior Fellows or Tutors, junior Fellows or Affiftants, under-graduate Students, and four Scholars. Vifitor. The Chancellor of the Univerfity.
Page 16 - drapery, fuppofed to have covered the roof, but now furled up by the Genii \ round about the houfe, towards the wall which difcover"eth the open air, and maketh way for the defcent of the Arts and Sciences, that are congregated in a circle of clouds, to
Page 18 - of her arms. Then Rapine, with her fiery eyes, grinning teeth, fharp twangs, her hands imbrued in blood, holding a bloody dagger in one hand, in the other a burning flambeau ; with thefe. inftruments threatening the deftruction of Learning, and all its habitations : but fhe is overcome, and prevented by a Herculean Genius, or power. Next that is reprefented
Page 108 - adjoins to Merton College on the eaft. It had its name from Robert de St. Alban, a citizen of Oxford, who conveyed the premifes to the Abbey of Littlemore. Of this Hall were Archbifhop Marfli ; Dr. Lamplugh, Archbifhop of York; Benedict Barnham, Alderman of London, who built the front of the Hall as it is at prefent; and William Lenthall,
Page 3 - their own patrimony. The town, including the fuburbs, is a mile in length from eaft to weft, and almoft as much in breadth from north to fouth, being three miles in circumference; but it is of an irregular figure; and feveral airy fpaces are comprehended within thefe limits, befides the many courts and gardens belonging
Page 16 - imitation of the Theatres of the ancient Greeks and Romans, which were too large to be covered with lead or tile, fo this, by the painting of the flat roof within, is reprefented open ; and as they ftretched a cordage from pilafter to pilafter, upon which they