Dictionary of National Biography, Volum 46Leslie Stephen Macmillan, 1896 |
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Side 59
... parliament as member for Beeralston , Devon- shire . In May and June 1641 he was impli- cated in the royalists ' first army plot , ' was imprisoned in the Gatehouse , and expelled from the House of Commons . He was bailed before the end ...
... parliament as member for Beeralston , Devon- shire . In May and June 1641 he was impli- cated in the royalists ' first army plot , ' was imprisoned in the Gatehouse , and expelled from the House of Commons . He was bailed before the end ...
Side 60
... House of Commons in 1553 , and held the office till the close of the parliament of 1555. He was de- scribed as ' excellent in the laws of this realm . ' He died in August 1557 , and was buried on 25 Aug. He married Mary , daughter of Ri ...
... House of Commons in 1553 , and held the office till the close of the parliament of 1555. He was de- scribed as ' excellent in the laws of this realm . ' He died in August 1557 , and was buried on 25 Aug. He married Mary , daughter of Ri ...
Side 77
... House of Commons in 1816 to determine the length of the seconds pen- dulum , he requested and obtained the co- operation of a committee of the Royal Society . He was a member of the board of longitude , and attended diligently at the ...
... House of Commons in 1816 to determine the length of the seconds pen- dulum , he requested and obtained the co- operation of a committee of the Royal Society . He was a member of the board of longitude , and attended diligently at the ...
Side 83
... House of Commons , but he spoiled the effect of his victory on the address by injudiciously try- ing to induce the house to pledge itself against any such scheme in the future . On 2 March 1801 he took his seat in the imperial parliament ...
... House of Commons , but he spoiled the effect of his victory on the address by injudiciously try- ing to induce the house to pledge itself against any such scheme in the future . On 2 March 1801 he took his seat in the imperial parliament ...
Side 84
... parliament in 1789 , and moved for an address in almost the same words as had ... house on 30 June , and died a few days later , on 8 July 1817 , at his house ... Commons , born on 29 March 1713 , was the second son of Bra- bazon Ponsonby ...
... parliament in 1789 , and moved for an address in almost the same words as had ... house on 30 June , and died a few days later , on 8 July 1817 , at his house ... Commons , born on 29 March 1713 , was the second son of Bra- bazon Ponsonby ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
afterwards appeared appointed April became Birmingham bishop born Bristol British brother buried Cambridge Charles church College Cornwall council Covent Garden daugh daughter death Dict died Drury Lane duated Dublin Duke Earl Edinburgh Edward eldest elected England English engraved father France French friends Gent George graduated B.A. Henry Henry VIII Herefordshire Hist History House of Commons House of Lords Ireland Irish James July June king king's knighted Lady land letters Lincoln's Inn London Lord manuscript March married Mary Memoirs ment Oxford Papers parliament Pococke poems Pole Pollock Ponsonby Pope Pope's Popham Porson Porter portrait Powell Preston Price Priestley Pringle printed Pritchard privy council Prynne published Queen rector returned Richard Robert Rolls of Parliament Royal sent Sept sermon Sir John Society Suffolk Thomas tion took translation Trinity College VIII wife William wrote
Populære avsnitt
Side 345 - He showed that madness often consisted 'in a morbid perversion of the natural feelings, affections, inclinations, temper, habits, moral dispositions, and natural impulses, without any remarkable disorder or defect of the intellect or knowing and reasoning faculties, and particularly without any insane illusion or hallucination
Side 270 - The Persons Excepted are such as have formerly served you in a very good Cause ; but, being now apostatised, I did rather make election of them, than of those who had always been for the King; — judging their iniquity double; because they have sinned against so much light, and against so many evidences of Divine Providence going along with and prospering a just Cause, in the management of which they themselves had a share.
Side 435 - That George Psalmanazar's piety, penitence, and virtue exceeded almost what we read as wonderful even in the lives of saints.
Side 409 - A committee having been appointed to inquire into the original standards of weights and measures in the kingdom of England, to consider the laws relating thereto, and to report their observations thereupon, together with their opinion of the most effectual means for ascertaining and enforcing uniform and certain standards of weights and measures...
Side 410 - He was educated at Westminster School and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he remained from 1636 to 1643.
Side 336 - I have been spared to be a witness to two other revolutions, both glorious. And now, methinks, I see the ardour for liberty catching and spreading ; a general amendment beginning in human affairs ; the dominion of kings changed for the dominion of laws, and the dominion of priests giving way to the dominion of reason and conscience.
Side 125 - THE FIRST SATIRE OF THE SECOND BOOK OF HORACE, Imitated in a Dialogue between ALEXANDER POPE, of Twickenham, in Com. Midd., Esq., on the one part, and his Learned Council on the other.
Side 345 - ... we are entitled to draw confidently the conclusion that all human races are of one species and one family.
Side 221 - The Art of Criticism as exemplified in Dr. Johnson's " Lives of the most eminent English Poets.
Side 234 - Berwickupon-Tweed ; that the words " clerk of the peace " shall comprehend and apply to any deputy or other person executing the duties of such clerk of the peace ; and the words