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Updated: May 18, 2025


The word turmae is applicable to such a cavalry as theirs, cf. Ann. 14, 34: Britannorum copiae passim per catervas et turmas exsultabant. Br. Ky. and others here understand it of the Roman cavalry. But R. Dr. and Wr. apply it to the Britons, and with reason, as we shall see below, and as we might infer indeed from its close connexion with covinarii, for the covinarii were certainly Britons.

He might be a poor specimen of a fellow, as witness the Sunday Chronicle passim, but he was not so poor as to come slinking back to upset things for his father just when he had done the only decent thing by removing himself. No, that was out of the question. What remained? The air of New York is bracing and healthy, but a man cannot live on it. Obviously he must find a job. But what job?

It would seem that there were special wardens here for ale drawing. Archaeologia, xxxvi, 235. Cf. J.H. Matthews, History of St. Ives , 144, et passim. Bishop Hobhouse, Churchwdn's Acc'ts of Croscombe, Pilton, etc., Somerset Rec. See the precedents given for the Western Circuit in Prynne, Canterburies' Doome, 152. Cf. also, ibid., 128 ff.

For my own very limited acquaintance with it, I am indebted to the extreme kindness of my friend, Professor Croom Robertson, who has most obligingly favoured me with a manuscript version of the portion referred to in the text. 'Lay Sermons, p. 240. 'Beauties of the Anti-Jacobin, 1799, pp. 214-6. 'Auguste Comte and Positivism, passim. 'History of Philosophy, 4th edition, vol. ii. pp. 654-735.

The Autobiography of Sir Henry Taylor, passim. Ibid. ii. pp. 302-3. Leslie Stephen, Life of Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, p. 49. "On the appointment of a Governor-general of Canada, shortly before his resignation of office, he observes in a diary, that it is not unlikely to be the last that will ever be made." Wakefield, Art of Colonization, p. 317. Ibid. pp. 312-3.

A new session was held this spring; the king, full of hopes of receiving supply; the commons, of circumscribing his prerogative. Winwood and Jeanin, passim. * Journ. 17th Feb. 1609. Kennet, p. 681.

For numerous gratuitous loans of parish money, see the Mere Acc'ts, Wilts Arch. and Nat. Hist. Mag., xxxv , passim. See Wilts Arch. Mag., xxxv. Cf. J.E. Foster, St. In 1564 the parishioners of Chagford, Devon, bought from the lord of the manor for £10 the local markets and fairs, subject to a yearly rent of 16s., which they had always paid as tenants.

"The Hunting Wasps": chapters 4 to 10 et passim. It is closely superimposed upon the inner envelope and is easily separated from it everywhere, except at the anal end, where it adheres to the second envelope. The adhesion of the two wrappers at one end and the non-adhesion at the other are the cause of the differences which the tweezers reveal when pinching the two ends of the cocoon.

M. de Lameth set about raising the money; he saw the Spanish ambassador and had the matter broached to Pitt who refused. Danton, as he said he would, voted for the King's death, and then aided or allowed the return of M. de Lameth to Switzerland. "Memoires," 317. "Twenty times, he said to me one day, I offered them peace. They did not want it. Robinet, passim.

Haywood, relying on tradition, says five companies gathered; he is invaluable as an authority, but it must be kept in mind that he often relies on traditional statement. The report of the six captains says "two divisions"; from Haywood we learn that the two divisions were two lines, evidently marching side by side, there being a right line and a left line. See James Smith, passim.

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