Chambers's Miscellany of Useful and Entertaining Tracts, Bind 14,Oplag 120 –Bind 16,Oplag 140William Chambers, Robert Chambers William and Robert Chambers |
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Side 26
... lord duke . No ; it never was For Judas's pay , for chinking gold and silver , That we did leave our king by the Great Stone . No ; not for gold and silver have there bled So many of our Swedish nobles . Neither Will we , with empty ...
... lord duke . No ; it never was For Judas's pay , for chinking gold and silver , That we did leave our king by the Great Stone . No ; not for gold and silver have there bled So many of our Swedish nobles . Neither Will we , with empty ...
Side 31
... Lord Arundel passed through the empire , in return from his embassy to Vienna , a fox crept out of a brake , and seized one of his attendants by the leg . The man took it up , for it was so weak it could not escape ; its eyes were ...
... Lord Arundel passed through the empire , in return from his embassy to Vienna , a fox crept out of a brake , and seized one of his attendants by the leg . The man took it up , for it was so weak it could not escape ; its eyes were ...
Side 3
... Lords and Commons was felt to be a fatal blow ; and this disaster , as it was thought to be , Edinburgh did not recover till the country in general took a start , conse- quent on the failure of the rebellion of 1745 , the abolition of ...
... Lords and Commons was felt to be a fatal blow ; and this disaster , as it was thought to be , Edinburgh did not recover till the country in general took a start , conse- quent on the failure of the rebellion of 1745 , the abolition of ...
Side 4
... Lord Coalstoun by the author of the Traditions of Edinburgh . " It was at that time the custom for advocates , and no less for judges , to dress themselves in gown , wig , and cravat , at their own houses , and to walk in a sort of ...
... Lord Coalstoun by the author of the Traditions of Edinburgh . " It was at that time the custom for advocates , and no less for judges , to dress themselves in gown , wig , and cravat , at their own houses , and to walk in a sort of ...
Side 6
... lord provost ( equivalent to lord mayor ) , and four bailies ( equivalent to alder- men ) . The police , now regulated and dressed on the model of that of the metropolis , is under the management of a body of commissioners , also ...
... lord provost ( equivalent to lord mayor ) , and four bailies ( equivalent to alder- men ) . The police , now regulated and dressed on the model of that of the metropolis , is under the management of a body of commissioners , also ...
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afterwards Alexander Selkirk appearance Badajoz began boat Bob Parsons body brother called Captain child church Cinque Ports court cylinder dead death Duke Duke of Mantua Edinburgh England Esther eyes father favour feet fire Florence France French gipsies girl give Grandville Gustavus hand happy Harold Harragan heard heart honour hundred ihram inhabitants Iron Mask island Jacque Denoyer James John Faa Kaaba king Kirk Yetholm labour land Lisa Lisle Littlethorpe lived looked Lord Louvois Matthioli Mecca mind mother native never night Norman Penn person Pignerol plague poor present prisoner Quakers Quintin received Saint-Mars Scotland Selkirk ship shore side soldiers soon steam streets sweet thee things thou thought Tinah tion took Tostig town vessels Watt whole wife William William Penn young