Liber Famelicus of Sir James Whitelocke: A Judge of the Court of King's Bench in the Reigns of James I. and Charles I. Now First Pub. from the Original Manuscript

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Camden Society, 1858 - 136 páginas
 

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Página 72 - March, 1855, and that we have examined the said accounts, with the vouchers relating thereto, and find the same to be correct and satisfactory. And we further report, that the following is an Abstract of the Receipts and Expenditure during the period we have mentioned.
Página 74 - MA (Out of print.) 66. Diary of John Rous, Incumbent of Santon Downham, Suffolk, from 1625 to 1642. Edited by Mary Anne E.
Página xiii - ... divers writings of consequence, and books which were left in my study, some of them they tore in pieces, others they burnt to light their tobacco, and some they carried away with them, to my extreme great loss and prejudice, in wanting the writings of my estate, and losing very many excellent manuscripts of my father's and others, and some of my own labours.
Página 72 - WE, the Auditors appointed to audit the Accounts of the Camden Society, report to the Society, that the Treasurer has exhibited to us an account of the Receipts and Expenditure of the Society...
Página xx - I was brought up at school under mr. Mulcaster, in the famous school of the Marchantaylors in London, whear I continued untill I was well instructed in the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin tongs.
Página 73 - Subscription of 1838-9. 1. Restoration of King Edward IV. 2. Kyng Johan, by Bishop Bale. 3. Deposition of Richard II. 4. Plumpton Correspondence. 5. Anecdotes and Traditions. For 1839.
Página 73 - For 1842. 20. Apology for the Lollards. 21. Rutland Papers. 22. Diary of Bishop Cartwright. 23. Letters of Eminent Literary Men. 24. Proceedings against Alice Kyteler. For 1843.
Página x - Never was man so just, so upright, so free from corrupt solicitations of great men and friends as he was ; never put Counsellors that practised before him to annual pensions of money or plate to have his favour. In all causes before him the Counsel might assure his client from the danger of bribery.
Página xiii - Laud, and used to say of him that he was "too full of fire, though a just and good man ; and that his want of experience in state matters, and his too much zeal for the church, and heat if he proceeded 1 For a fearful diatribe against Laud by James Mill, see Bain's Life of Jane* Mitt, p.

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