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FREEMAN, that William introduced a new system, and that he did so either as a new feudal law or as an amendment upon the existing feudalism. Eadmerus, who wrote in the reign of Henry I., gives the LII. William I. as a confirmatory law. The charter given by Stubbs is a contraction of the law given by Eadmerus.

In a hot country where the threshing floor is uncovered it is desirable to build a shelter near by where the hands can resort in the heat of the day. Threshing and winnowing LII. The heaviest and best of the sheaves should be selected on the threshing floor and the spikes laid aside for seed.

Reg., vol. xvi., p. 265; Astr. Astr., August, 1899; Ann. Bureau des Long., 1898; Nature, vols. lii., p. 439; lvi., p. 280; lix., p. 304; lx., p. 491; Astroph. Roy. R. Dublin Soc., vol. iv., p. 481, 1891; Rosse, Proc. Roy. Trans., vol. cxliii., p. 397; Proc. Roy. Astr. "The analogy between Mars and the earth is perhaps by far the greatest in the whole solar system."

Isa. lii. 3, "Ye have sold yourselves FOR NOUGHT, and ye shall be redeemed without money." See also, Jer. xxxiv. 14 Romans vii. 14, vi. 16 John viii. 34, and the case of Joseph and the Egyptians, already quoted. In the purchase of wives, though spoken of rarely, it is generally stated that they were bought of third persons.

LII. Also House Exec. Doc. No. 100, Thirty-seventh Cong., Second Sess. Brit. and For. St. Pap., Vol. LII, p. 359. Wharton's Digest, Sec. 58, Vol. I, p. 312. Brit. and For. St. Pap., Vol. LII, p. 237. Brit. and For. St. Pap., Vol. LII, p. 294. Mr. Seward to Mr. Corwin, Sept. 2, 1861. House Exec. Doc. No. 100, p. 22, Thirty-seventh Cong., Second Sess. Brit. and For. St. Pap., Vol. LII, p. 325.

LII. He was instructed, when a boy, in the rudiments of almost all the liberal sciences; but his mother diverted him from the study of philosophy, as unsuited to one destined to be an emperor; and his preceptor, Seneca, discouraged him from reading the ancient orators, that he might longer secure his devotion to himself.

'If the Son make you free, ye shall be free indeed. If not, then are ye slaves indeed, having 'sold yourselves for nought, and declined to be 'redeemed without money. 'Be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the Lord. ISAIAH lii. 11. The context points to a great deliverance. It is a good example of the prophetical habit of casting prophecies of the future into the mould of the past.

LII. However, though everybody else declined to become candidates for the consulship, Cato persuaded Lucius Domitius, and encouraged him not to give up, for he said the contest with the tyrants was not for power, but for liberty.