A. F. (Albert Pollard) Pollard
Capitolo 45
I begin religious it was in danger; and the most pacific, organized
parts of the community took the small action in the struggle. Anybody great
against battle fights southern of the Thames, and any city withstood a siege. It
glances as if the great military and feudal experts which motorize
mainly placed on the Confinements, part was taken in a final internecine
lotteries for the control of England, in rather the same way as the
Ostmark or East Border of the empire it became Austria and the Nordmark
or north Border became Prussia, and to turn dominated Germany.
Certainly the defeat of these strengths was a victory for southern and
oriental England, and for the commercial and maritime affairs on that
its increasing wealth and the prosperity hung; and the most important point in
the wars were not the triumph of Edward IV on the Lancastrians in
1461 but his/her triumph on Warwick, the kingmaker, ten years later. The
Monarchy New has reasonably been together from 1471; but Edward IV didn't have
the political genius to work out in particularized administration the results
of the victory that he owes to his/her military ability and Richard III,
who possessed the ability, it did him impossible as a king from the
crimes he had to commit for reaching the throne. The
reconstruction of the government of English on a more breadth and more fixed national
base had gone away therefore to Henry VII and the House of Tudor.
I CAPITULATE IV
THE PROGRESS OF THE NATIONALISM
1485-1603
England had passed through the Middle Ages without giving some signal of
the greatness that attended his/her future development. Edward III and
Henry V had won the provisional renown in France, but sovereign English they had
not succeeded in subjugating the smallest countries in Scotland and Ireland,
what their worry was more immediately. Wycliffe and Chaucer, with
smoked Bacon of Roger, is perhaps the only names English of the first importance in
the kingdoms of medieval thought and the literature, unless we put Bede (673-
735) in the Centuries Averages; for insular genius you don't seem to have