Publications, Volume 37

Voorkant
Society at Clarendon Press, 1899
 

Overige edities - Alles bekijken

Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen

Populaire passages

Pagina 151 - Cheife place in citie oft, unphysickt health, And (that which seasons all) the name of good, In Levins were all mixt, yet all are gon ; Only the good name lasts, that look upon. 1 Hutton adds ' mercer,' and so monuments in this church by the colDingley, 1.
Pagina 260 - Times, i. 186. with the ladie Catesbie his wife, in the lodgings that Sir Georg Peckham repaired, and the said lady being delivered of a woman child, did pay her chrysom and all other duties to the vicar and dark of S. Thomas parish, acknowledging the same parish to be their owne parish during all the time of their abode there. Paid 21 July in the yeare of our Lord aforesaid unto William Chalfont, then vicar. The said child was not christened by the said vicar, but by a popish preist. Robert Lynck,...
Pagina 194 - Januar. 1645. Hurt by her husband's sword but not his will, Undone by that which did defend her still, Unhappy fate this envious course had found, To take the steel from him, from chance the wound : Death had...
Pagina 460 - PROVOST OF QUEEN'S COLLEGE (Dr. MAGRATH); the REGIUS PROFESSOR OF MODERN HISTORY, Oriel (F. YORK POWELL, Esq.) ; the Rev. H. RASHDALL, New College ; and CL SHADWELL, Esq., Frewin Hall, Oxford). The annual subscription is one gninea, and the published volumes as a set can be obtained by new members at one-fourth the published price (ie 10*.
Pagina 181 - Limina, cum coeli voluit qui vivere sanctis. Cum quibus esse rogo dubites nil, candide lector, Namque fide in Christum sperabat habere salutem. Cui simili vita fac sis, et morte secundus, Sic, morte invita, fuerit tibi vita perennis.' I should suspect that cuius (scanned as a monosyllable) ought to be read for quam in line 8. * Lord Buckhurst was a graduate of Cambridge, incorporated at Oxford after his election as Chancellor. It is not recorded, though it is probable...
Pagina 222 - Crucis vulgo Halywell]. RA June 24, 1663 [quaere of Mr. (George) Ashwell]. Carfax register, thus : — 'The 2nd June 1614 Mr. Thomas Harrys, the son of Mr. Francis Harrys, was buried at Waddam College.' 8. Mary Magdalen parish register, beginning 1574. [Note that this register, which is in paper and much decayed, I transcribed * into Dutch paper and bound it up at my owne charg, and gave it to the parish, 1667 {ie £).] Baptized.
Pagina 171 - Wodeward in the said inne, kept it to the time of their death. But the said William Cogan dying before her, shee took to her second husband Edmund Irysh, alderman of this citie, who, having no issue by her, left her a widdow also. The said Margaret was buried here, by her father's grave, and neare to those of William Cogan her first husband, Agnes Flexney her daughter, and Joane another daughter, in Nov. 1556. Shee had issue, by her first husband, Thomas Cogan, her son and heir; and Agnes beforementioned...
Pagina 187 - This John Snell, the son of Andrew Snell and Margaret his wife (daughter of John Carnahan), was borne in the parish of Comonnell in Carrick in the sherivedome of Aire in Scotland; bred in the Universitie of Glasgow under the care of Mr. James Darumpley, professor of philosophie; came into England in the time of Oliver Cromwell in a verie meane condition, and, in his journey through Lancashire, calling at the house of the lady Houghton at Walton neare Houghton tower (one of the daughters of Sir Roger...
Pagina 188 - Bridgman, who having much chamber-practice, (Snell) did write severall conveyances for him and was so diligent a servant to him, and to his lady, that when ever the said knight was afflicted with the gout, he was the onlie person who was trusted to attend him. At the king's restauration when Sir Orlando was made Lord Cheif Baron of the Exchecquer, Snell was made the crier of that court ; in which office he continued after Sir Orlando was made Lord Cheif Justice of the Common Pleas ; and when he was...
Pagina 153 - ... whose wife Mris Mary Young hath given 5 pounds per annum to this parish for ever, that his body might be kept from violation. He departed this life 16 June 1644. Underneath it, lying on the ground, is a marble and this written on it : — James Yong : buried 16 June 1644. On a marble * fastned to the said south wall at the upper end is the effigies of a man kneeling in armour, engraven on a brass plate, with two sons kneeling behind him, and out of his mouth goes a scroule, wherin is this engraven...