The Literary Panorama and National Register, Volume 3C. Taylor, 1816 - English literature |
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Page 11
... court where they lived was not cleansed , and was a perfect nuisance ; persons were afraid of entering it for fear of contagion : and have been told by medical men , that whenever they visited the poor in this court , they thought they ...
... court where they lived was not cleansed , and was a perfect nuisance ; persons were afraid of entering it for fear of contagion : and have been told by medical men , that whenever they visited the poor in this court , they thought they ...
Page 33
... Court dence is carried to a great extent , in of Claims , by which precedence is ad- our day ; it is difficult to say , whether justed , honors are ascertained , fees are it be not indulged to an extreme ; but , determined , and duties ...
... Court dence is carried to a great extent , in of Claims , by which precedence is ad- our day ; it is difficult to say , whether justed , honors are ascertained , fees are it be not indulged to an extreme ; but , determined , and duties ...
Page 37
... court resides at Guildford , of Poyle and Catteshill , who held their was executed by the lords of the manors lands by this tenure ; and that though they are respectively stiled , in different records , Marshal of the King's court ...
... court resides at Guildford , of Poyle and Catteshill , who held their was executed by the lords of the manors lands by this tenure ; and that though they are respectively stiled , in different records , Marshal of the King's court ...
Page 39
... court , in those days , was frequently removed to Guildford , certain persons , who held im- mediately of the King in that neighbour- hood , were obliged , by the terms of their respective grants , to provide , as often as this should ...
... court , in those days , was frequently removed to Guildford , certain persons , who held im- mediately of the King in that neighbour- hood , were obliged , by the terms of their respective grants , to provide , as often as this should ...
Page 41
... court is called Lawless , be- cause held at an unlawful or lawless hour , or quia dicta sine lege . The title of it in the Court Rolls runs thus to this day . KING'S - HILL , in ROCHFORD . SS . } Curia de domino Rege , Dicta sine lege ...
... court is called Lawless , be- cause held at an unlawful or lawless hour , or quia dicta sine lege . The title of it in the Court Rolls runs thus to this day . KING'S - HILL , in ROCHFORD . SS . } Curia de domino Rege , Dicta sine lege ...
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Popular passages
Page 621 - This England never did (nor never shall) Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror, But when it first did help to wound itself. Now these her princes are come home again, Come the three corners of the world in arms, And we shall shock them : Nought shall make us rue, if England to itself do rest but true.
Page 843 - USEFUL KNOWLEDGE: or, a Familiar and Explanatory Account of the various Productions of Nature, Mineral, Vegetable, and Animal, which are chiefly employed for the use of Man.
Page 875 - TSJ when it was placed between the exploding vessel and the bladder, though it did not present a surface of more than half a square inch, and the explosive mixture in the bladder in passing through it to supply the vacuum produced...
Page 955 - Then the lord chancellor, by the Prince Regent's command, said — My Lords and Gentlemen, — It is the command of his Royal Highness the Prince Regent, acting in the name and on behalf of his majesty, that this parliament be prorogued to Monday the 23d day of August next, to be then here holden ; and this parliament is accordingly prorogued to Monday the 23d day of August next.
Page 823 - Symbolic Illustrations of the History of England, from the Roman Invasion to the present time, accompanied with a Narrative of the principal Events ; designed more particularly for the Instruction of Young Persons. By Mary Ann Rundell.
Page 263 - HISTORY OF ANCIENT EUROPE, From the earliest Times to the Subversion of the Western Empire ; with a Survey of the most important Revolutions in Asia and Africa : in a Series of Letters from a Gentleman to his Son: ilitmded as an Accompaniment to Dr.
Page 1017 - Elements of Plane and Spherical Trigonometry ; with their applications to Heights and Distances, Projections of the Sphere, Dialling, Astronomy, the Solution of Equations, and Geodesic Operations ; intended for the use of Mathematical Seminaries, and of First-year Men at College. By Olinthus Gregory, LL. D. of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich.
Page 823 - An Inquiry into the Causes of the Motion of the Blood : With an Appendix ; in which the Process of Respiration, and its Connection with the Circulation of the Blood are attempted to be elucidated.
Page 685 - ... and turnips. They have also plenty of hogs, and goats. The woods abound with a species of wild hog, and the coasts of the island with several kinds of good fish. Their agricultural implements are made by themselves, from the iron supplied by the Bounty, which, with great labour, they beat out into spades, hatchets, &c.
Page 219 - O'er the wide wat'ry waste my course I held, In sufferings oft, and oft in perils cast, Till Malta's port received our ships at last Here sad captivity's dull weight I find...