- A
preface (/ˈprɛfəs/) or
proem (/ˈproʊɛm/) is an
introduction to a book or
other literary work
written by the work's author. An
introductory essay written...
- "Pericles's
Funeral Oration" (Ancient Gr****: Περικλέους Επιτάφιος) is a
famous speech from Thucydides's
History of the
Peloponnesian War. The
speech was...
- Stock. p. 61. ISBN 978-1-49820761-4. "Anselmus
Cantuariensis - Proslogion,
Proemium" (in Latin). The
Latin Library.
Retrieved 10
August 2019. "Sermo 43, 7...
-
borrowed from the
church history of
Theodoret of
Cyrrhus of 444, e.g. for the
Proemium, and
deleted in
particular each
mention of John II,
Bishop of Jerusalem...
- aliorum; cf. Aquinas' In Boeth. de Trin. 5.1, In 10 meta. 6 and 11, and the
Proemium to the latter)." Rutherford, J.
Alexander (2021). The Gift of Seeing: A...
-
impulse to
write his work to a
certain Theodorus, who is
alluded to in the
proemium to the
second book as "a holy man of God" and
seems therefore to have been...
- the
siege and the
supposed divine protection of the
Virgin Mary, a new
proemium for the
celebrated Akathist Hymn was
written by an
unknown author, possibly...
-
states explicitly that he was of
Sicilian birth (oriundo) in
Matheseos I,
proemium, 4. The text by
Paulus Alexandrinus of 378 is an
introduction to the subject...
- a poem
entitled "Orpheus to Musaeus",
often referred to as the proem,
proemium, or prologue, in
which Orpheus speaks to
Musaeus (who is
usually described...
-
Langhorne (poet).
Wikisource has
original works by or about: John
Langhorne Proemium to the 1766
Poetical Works "Langhorne, John" in the
Dictionary of National...