953 resultados para Griffiths, John, of Glandwr, 1731-1811.
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Photocopy.
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"Letters, telegrams, cablegrams, and other writings about the war, and kindred matters."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"His Grace the Duke of Wharton's speech in the House of Lords, on the third reading of the bill to inflict pains and penalties on Francis (late) Lord Bishop of Rochester" (with special t.p. dated 1724): v. 2, p. [633]-685.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Letters written in French.
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Vols. 1, 3-12, 14-16, 18-20, 22, 25-27 have no date on t. p.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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João de Patmos, através de elementos literários e dramáticos e da estrutura cênica e litúrgica, criou no Apocalipse um universo simbólico específico. As imagens deste universo são protagonizadas tanto por seres divinos como também por pessoas humanas que se encontram exaltadas entre os seres celestiais, cantando e louvando a Deus. Durante o processo da composição, o autor da obra se inspirou na tradição apocalíptica e escatológica das tradições visionárias merkavah presentes em Ezequiel, Daniel e 1 Enoque, e fez uma leitura própria destas tradições que obedece aos seus próprios objetivos literários e às necessidades dos leitores / ouvintes do escrito. Os seres celestiais e humanos destacados nas imagens, e a presença de várias confluências de tradições merkavah indicam que o Apocalipse se insere numa vertente da literatura apocalíptica contemporânea do escrito. É notável que, tanto na apocalíptica, em Qumran, na literatura hekhalot como no Apocalipse, há indícios de uma intensa experiência extática de grupos de culto celestial. O cenário de visões é prioritariamente litúrgico, dentro de um templo celestial. As imagens geradas pela leitura das experiências místicas de Ezequiel, 1 Enoque e outros escritos místicos eram contempladas e enriquecidas pelas experiências de viagens celestiais de grupos proféticos durante cultos terrestres. Nas experiências místicas registradas nos fragmentos analisados do Apocalipse de João podem ser percebidas certas feições dos viajantes celestiais. Nos seus discursos sobre a visão do mundo que contemplam e definem, eles revelam suas crenças, desafios e expectativas, a sua auto-compreensão religiosa. Além da identidade dos protagonistas dos cultos celestiais percebe-se também o caráter e a função altamente criadores do fenômeno extático em geral, como também, em particular, no Apocalipse de João. O escrito revela e promove uma estrutura do mundo divino-humano completo e perfeito que está num movimento contínuo, um mundo que, com toda a simbologia inerente, expressa a idéia de criar, recriar e governar o universo inteiro. Os seres humanos participam ativamente deste universo e cooperam com a função reconstituinte dele. Essa cooperação na reconstituição do mundo tem um caráter presente e atual, embora a plenitude desta reconstituição esteja reservada para o futuro.
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The purpose of this dissertation was to analyze the works of Federico García Lorca within the mystic context that dominates their very genesis. The problematic definition of mysticism was explored lest it be confused with traditional mysticism, which implies union with the divine. The historiography of literature speaks of the Mystic Genre, yet it does not address the mystic mode of artistic creation due to its inability to adhere to rational measure. This mode of conception was explored through Lorca's poetic discourse: ‘Lorquian mysticism’ is the result of the poet's cultivation of an innate spiritual potential enhanced by external influences and technical mastery. ^ There is visible influence of Fray Luis of León in Lorca's early Libro de poemas and El maleficio de la mariposa, as well as of Saint John of the Cross in the later Diván del Tamarit, Sonetos de amor and Yerma. However, definitive echoes of poets from the Sufi and other Eastern mystic traditions were also illustrated in these late works. A persistent longing to elide the physical condition, the greatest obstacle of the transcendental quest, is the essence of Lorca's poetic voice. ^ The object of this analysis was Lorca's language, which reaches levels removed from conventional thought. His dazzling metaphors and his particular use of symbols and of paradox compare equitably with those of great mystic poets. Like them, Lorca was faced with the same limitations of language to describe an ineffable experience; he embraced what Octavio Paz describes as ‘sacred language’: there is a linguistic frugality as well as an ambiguity in Lorca's poetic art that result from his realization of supercognitive states. Yet such an interpretation is rejected by the rationalist approach, invoking the age-old debate between faith and reason and signaling the application of psychoanalytical theory. This limited approach was disputed on the basis of reader-response theory. Lorca was truly an eclectic and a modification of the conventional reader's preestablished horizon of expectations is essential in order to seal the gaps in his late works. This innovative perspective placed Lorca within the framework of a new mysticism in the modern world. ^
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El presente trabajo ofrece el texto griego del Dialogo de un Sarraceno y un cristiano con una traducción española. En la introducción tratamos de los autores posibles, los contenidos y los principales asuntos en discusión en el seno del Islam, así como generalidades sobre el género literario y el griego del escrito. Por último se ensaya una posible explicación del desorden temporal (que oscila sin aparente sentido entre el aoristo y el presente), partiendo de la moderna teoría lingüística conocida como teoría de la perfectividad.
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The intellectual production of Johannes Gallensis (also known as John of Wales, c. 1210/30 – 1285), regent-master of the Friars Minor at Oxford and later a lecturer and Doctor of Theology at Paris, was oriented towards furnishing Catholic preachers with a variety of compilations of moral philosophy aimed to serve them in their pastoral ministry. One of these compilations is the Communiloquium, a manual of a kind, which displays its author's attempt to provide adequate and specific argumentation for admonishing all sorts and types of devotees. Its most prominent characteristic is a highly accurate use of classical auctoritates and exempla, which turned this work into a kind of anthology of quotations and references, for it offered its readers the possibility of citing sources and texts that they themselves had never actually consulted. The impressive number of manuscript copies of the Communiloquium that reached our times bears witness to its great popularity (some one hundred and sixty dispersed in different European libraries, according to Jenny Swanson’s John of Wales. A Study of the Work and Ideas of a Thirteenth-Century Friar). The Communiloquium must have reached the Iberian soil by means of Franciscan friars and soon spread through courtly circles, as much as in the religious milieu, due to the political taint of its first part, rooted in the organological metaphor and containing extensive reflections on the virtues and the due behaviour of a monarch. In the Crown of Aragon, the Communiloquium used to be read out loud even among the artisans. In Castile, on the other hand, particularly between the XIIIth and the XVth centuries, its main audience happened to be the lettered nobility and those intellectuals who, dedicated to composing glosas and specula principum, required its resources...
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Published copy of the 1807 College Laws with the admittatur of undergraduate John Walsh signed by President John Kirkland on February 25, 1811.
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Advertising matter: [4] p. at end (not included in pagination) and on p. 2-4 of wrappers.