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Art. of 1559 in Cardwell, Doc. Ann., i, 211. Hale, Crim. Barnes' Eccles. Also Hale, ubi supra, 146, 159, etc. Presentments for not receiving are numerous in the act-books. A few references are, Dean of York's Visit., 219 ff. E.g., at Goathland 20 persons are presented by name. See also Hale, Crim. Prec., 163, 171, 176, etc., and the other act-books heretofore cited. Ann., i, 336.

Proc., 19. In Durham city "sub-pedagogi" are also spoken of in the various wards. Op. cit., passim. Other examples will be found in Dean of York's Visit., 225, 229 etc. Hale, Crim. Canterbury Visit., xxvi, 20, 21, 25, 31, etc. Cardwell, Doc. Ann., i, 176 and 182. Corresp. of Archbp. Parker, Parker Soc., 382-3. Cf. also Archbp. E.g., Hale, Crim. Prec., 188 ff. W.H. Overall and A.J. Waterlow, St.

Grindal's Inj. at York, 1571, Remains of Grindal, Parker Soc., 129. Or judge acting by delegation from the ordinary. Cf. Queen's Inj. of 1559, Art. xiv. Hale; Crim. Prec., 193. Cf. Also Whitgift's Articles of 1583, Cardwell, Doc. Canterbury Visit., xxv, 36. Cf. Canons of 1597: "De recusantibus et aliis excommunicatis publice denunciandis." Cardwell, Syn., i, 156. Also Croke's Eliz.

A not uncommon entry in the act-books is "no levy of the fyne of 12d." See, e.g., Manchester Deanery Visit., 57, et passim. Barnes' Eccles. Proc., 119, et passim. Hale, Crim. Prec., passim. See examples in note 32, pp. 19 supra. Hale, Crim. For some interesting receipt items see The Westminster Tobacco Box, Pt. ii, Overseers Acc'ts, 18 ff. Wandsworth Acc'ts, Surrey Arch.

Canterbury Visit., ubi supra. Hale, Churchwardens' Prec., 90-1 . Canterbury Visit., xxvii, 223 . Cf. ibid., 214. Hale, Crim. Canterbury Visit., xxvi, 22 . Ibid., 20 . Ibid., 21 , 44. Ibid., 22, 23, 26 etc. Op. cit., xxvi, 33 . Ibid., 39 . Ibid., 31. Op. cit., xxvii, 224 . Op. cit., xxv, 13 . E.g., Hale, Crim. Prec., 221 . The higher nobility excepted. Cardwell, Syn., i, 128. Barnes' Eccles.

Eliot is able occasionally to deliver himself of one of those complicated and remarkable imaginings of his: apparently it is only in language of an exquisite purity so far as material goes, but twisted and ragged out of easy recognition, that these nurslings can be swathed. As for surprise, that, presumably, is an emotion which the author of Ara Vos Prec is not unwilling to provoke.

Maldon, in 1577, Hale, Crim. Prec., 158. For refusing to keep her seat in church according to this order Elizabeth Harris was presented the next year, Hale, loc. cit., 171. The vestry of St. Hale, Crim. Prec., 241-2: "Contra Hayward, puellam. Presentatur, for that she beinge but a yonge mayde, sat in the pewe with her mother, to the greate offence of many reverend women." Cf. Barnes' Eccles. Cf.

Soc. 2nd. ser., i, 235 ff. in fact any of the accounts of the period that have been printed in detail. Archdeacon Hale in Crim. Prec., introd., p. lx. Hale, Crim. Prec., 205 . In Warrington deanery, at the bishop's visitation in 1592, one Grimsford is cited for not living with his wife.

Prec., introd. p. liii. Any casual inspection of the visitation act-books reveals the fact that the judge sits either in court or in chambers between visitations, for offenders are constantly ordered to appear again in a few days or in a few weeks. Compulsory presentments were, however, limited by law and custom to two courts a year. See canons 116 and 117 of the Canons of 1604.