Its purport was understood rather from his gestures than the sounding quality of the boyish voice; but at all events, the chronicler adds, the people could not fail to be well pleased.
It seemed,’ says the chronicler of Viterbo, ‘as if men were weary of the long peace and took the field for little money.
The chronicler who gives us this sad information was imprisoned for debt on account of the failure of the Bonaccorsi, whose partner he was.
The reader may be interested in some illustrations of the manner in which the Chinese official chronicler arranges, in chronological order, his statements of conspicuous local events.
But a better explanation of her action is given by the details furnished by the chronicler in connection with the next case.
It is only fair, if small things may be compared with great, that the humble chronicler of a later day should be accorded the same liberal method of interpretation which has long been granted to classical authors.
This brief comparison should be convincing evidence that Drake's chronicler did not describe the Trinidad Bay Yurok; but there is added evidence in the word forms of the Madox vocabulary.
To the chronicler these incidents appeal for that very reason.
By what means Curly Bill supplied himself with a new pony this chronicler does not know.
We now pass to the second half of the tenth century, and there we find the Saxon chronicler Widukind.
Somewhat older than these works is Historia Danica, by the Danish chronicler Saxo.
These names are found arranged into a genealogy by the English Church historian Beda, by the English chronicler Nennius, and in the Anglo-Saxon chronicle.
And the chroniclersays that though there was bodily illness, yet it was a trance of the soul at the same time (vol.
The dates of the Chronicler are different from these.
Francisco de Santa Maria, chronicler of the Order, says that the uncle was Francisco Alvarez de Cepeda (Reforma de los Descalços, lib.
This took place in the year 1580, according to the Chroniclerof the Order (Reforma de los Descalços, lib.
The latter says that the Chronicler is in error when he asserts that this monastery of Maria of Jesus was endowed.
The Chronicler of the Order differs from all and assigns the year 1536 as the year in which she entered the monastery.
Observation is the foundation of history, and Martyr was pre-eminently a keen and discriminating observer, a diligent and conscientious chronicler of the events he observed, hence are the laurels of the historian equitably his.
The "C" Troop chronicler is positive that both officers visited "C" Troop before going to any general or to any other command, and that they met there for the first time after the combat.
The chronicler denies that Lord Lucan, as Kinglake states, galloped after Scarlett after having given Lord Cardigan his "parting instructions.
When Lord Raglan came down from the upland after all was over, the "C" Troop chronicler says that he went straight for Lucan then in front of the Heavy Cavalry brigade, having first sent for Cardigan to meet him.
British officers are not given to thrusting on a chronicler tales of their own prowess.
The testimony of the "C" Troop chronicler differs from the above statement in every detail.
But the "C" Troop chronicler states that as the Troop was crossing the plain a few Russian horsemen were seen by it trotting fast along the top of the ridge [Footnote: See Map.
Kinglake makes the Russian front meet our assault halted, but the "C" Troop chronicler declares that when the collision occurred the mass were actually moving forward but at "a pace so slow that it could hardly be called a trot.
Nor does the chronicler dare to put forward Lucy Morris as a heroine.
The chronicler states this at once, as he scorns to keep from his reader any secret that is known to himself.
But if it be worthy of the chronicler to note the massacre of Anderida, a small seaport, why should he omit the far more important capture of Augusta?
Froissart~: an early French chronicler or historian who visited England in the reigns of Edward III.
One is not surprised to find a chronicler in the pay of the house of Alençon representing the differences concerning the Maid, which arose between the Sire de la Trémouille and the Duke of Alençon, in a light most unfavourable to the King.
He is the last chronicler of the Venetian feasts, and with him ends that long series that began with Giorgione's concert and which developed and passed through suppers at Cana and banquets at the houses of Levi and the Pharisee.
Gentile is the first chronicler of the men and manners of his time.
Dog-flesh was next reluctantly tasted, and found, as our conscientious chronicler observes, to be somewhat sweet and insipid.
The pacification of Amboise, a contemporary chronicler tells us, was received with greater or less cordiality in different localities of France, very much according to the number of Protestants they had contained before the war.
A conscientiously particular chronicler of events would have detailed the route of each day, the latitude and longitude of each resting-place, the very nature of the wood which composed the fuel of each fire.
An old chronicler relates that one noble dame cherished a long false tress of singular beauty, which had always commanded admiration; she felt that this would prove a worthy offering.
He and his wife dearly loved each other, and the chronicler says, "No wonder, for they were as beautiful as angels.
This explanation is borne out by the Warkworth Chronicler and others, who, in an evident mistake of the person addressed, state that Clarence wrote word to Warwick not to fight till he came.
Thus writes the official chronicler in the Lancashire Fusiliers' Annual.
If Shakespeare could be so true to the actualities, why should not we seek to realise the scene so vividly described by the chroniclerand the dramatist?
The temporary palace erected for the occasion was so magnificent that a chronicler tells us it might have been the work of Leonardo da Vinci.
Another chronicler gives us her words as follows: "I pray God to save the King, and send him long to reign over you, for a gentler or more merciful prince was there never.
It is described fantastically by Morales, and accurately by Villa-amil, but the quaintest account is by the chronicler Jacobo de Castro.
Whoever reads Froissart needs to remember that the old chronicler is too much enamoured of chivalry, and is too easily dazzled by splendor of rank, to be a rigidly just censor of faults committed by knights and nobles and kings.
The story of Hamlet is first found in Saxo Grammaticus, a Danish chronicler of the tenth century.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "chronicler" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: annalist; chronicler; diarist; narrator; timekeeper; timer