United States or Seychelles ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


To his surprise the Italian answered, with every appearance of truthfulness, that he had not seen Mr. Manners at all! Manners replied briefly that he had had no interview whatever with Tournelli, and changed the subject quickly. The mystery as we persisted in believing it was heightened when another member deposed that he had seen "Tom," the Western waiter, coming from Manners's office.

Wherever he came, he disarmed and disbanded the new levies; deposed the Arminian magistrates, and expelled the ministers of their party.

There is no such thing known among these as a vulgar display, or a flaunting of the deposed forces in the faces of the creatures left behind. In man's treatment of his kind, there is everywhere betokened his unfaith and fear.

She turned to put the fan into her trunk, and he murmured something about exchanging it. "No," she said, "we'll keep it as a a monument." And she deposed him, with another peal of laughter, from the proud height to which he had climbed in pity of her nervous fears of the day.

The patriarch deposed upon oath that Copronymus had made the most irreligious confessions to him, as that our Saviour, far from being the Son of God, was, in his opinion, a mere man, born of his mother in the common way. The truth of these accusations was perhaps, in a measure, sustained by the revenge that the emperor took on the patriarch for his indiscreet revelations.

I was not even discharged, though I was deposed from the wagon to the command of a truck of which I was myself the horse. I "ran out" brick from the pit after that in the morning. More than twenty years after, addressing the students of Rutgers College, I told them of my experience in the brick-yard which was so near them.

Caesar, very much discomposed at what had past, got up from his seat, and, laying bare his neck, said, he was ready to receive the stroke, if any one of them desired to give it. The crown was at last put on one of his statues, but was taken down by some of the tribunes, who were followed home by the people with shouts of applause. Caesar, however, resented it, and deposed them.

To the magistrates asking why they were deposed, he briefly replied, "The quiet of the land requires it. It is necessary to have unanimous resolutions in the States-General at the Hague. This cannot be accomplished without these preliminary changes. I believe that you had good intentions and have been faithful servants of the Fatherland. But this time it must be so."

It is well-nigh incredible that the Zúñiga who championed Copernicus, and displays vigilant self-restraint in his writings, should have been guilty of such flightiness as is brought home to his namesake; it is by no means inconceivable that the Zúñiga who deposed against Luis de Leon should have been guilty of occasional lapses.

In consideration whereof he was highlie commended by the pope. At length archbishop William was conuicted and deposed, Albert bishop of Hostia pronouncing sentence in this wise: "We doo decrée by the apostolike authoritie, that William archbishop of Yorke is to be deposed from his sée, bicause Stephan king of England, before any canonicall election, named him."