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1840 Deaths (X)

       
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Links and Factoids

By: Sam Vaknin

... Bulimia Nervosa are indeed more common among adolescents. But close to 80% of all deaths from anorexia nervosa are among people older than 45. Act... ...ost, for instance, and did, indeed, stand for "Oll Korrect". OK caught on fast. By 1840, it was all over the USA from New York to New Orleans. Pres... ... 27 liters (about 7 gallons). Massachusetts had a prohibition law between 1838 and 1840. Maine followed in 1846- 1851 and then was imitated by a hos... ...d sulfuric acid. During the autumn of 1909, there were more than 1,000 “smoke-fog” deaths in Glasgow and Edinburgh. In 1952 smog killed more than 4... ...tp://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/giantsquid/giantsquid.html Stamps On May 1, 1840, Great Britain was the first county to issue a postage stam... ...the first letter bearing the Black Penny is dated May 6 - and not May 1. On May 8, 1840 another stamp - a two pence blue Victoria - was disseminate... ...urran of the National Weather Service. In the United States alone there were 3,239 deaths and 9,818 injuries from lightning strikes between 1959 an...

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The Public Domain : Enclosing the Commons of the Mind

By: James Boyle

...ary heritage. While Macaulay is the best-remembered English skeptic from the 1840s, there were other, more radical skeptics who saw copy- right primar... ...ered (without PowerPoint support) on the floor of the House of Commons in the 1840s, we would be better off. Every- one is beginning to understand that... ...urplus produced by enclosure helped to save a society devastated by the mass deaths of the sixteenth century. Those who weep over the terrible ef- fec... ...7278_u01.qxd 8/28/08 11:04 AM Page 52 their images should end with their deaths, and that courts would agree that those rights were tightly limite...

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The Path of Splitness

By: Indrek Pringi

... power of national banks, moneyed capitalists…money: filthy lucre, capitalist deathsheads: the Jewish Rothschild family intermarrying with English, A... ...Harbor was going to be bombed and letting Americans die so he could use their deaths as an excuse to declare war. Just like Bush Jr. used the pre-kn... ...first would-be skinners lost their own skins in the process and died horrible deaths. They were literally skinned alive by their own evils… they di... ...oing it? No. Even with horrible signs and catastrophes, and sufferings, and deaths… these unwanted scum were forced back again and again, so the i... ...Why wasn’t Fort Comfort just 35 miles away beset with the same afflictions and deaths and starvation and disease, and rebellion and intrigue and pois... ...ss. Machines make you work more whether you like it or not. Finally in the 1840’s, up to the1900’s: European and American workers began rebelling ...

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The First Part of Henry the Sixth. Edited by Louise Pound

By: William Shakespeare

...neuer shall reuiue: 27 Vpon a Woodden Coffin we attend; 28 And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, 29 We with our stately presence glorif... ...land into France, 1839 This Fellow heere with enuious carping tongue, 1840 Vpbraided me about the Rose I weare, 1841 Saying, the sanguine ... ...ne day. 2209 In thee thy Mother dyes, our Households Name, 2210 My Deaths Reuenge, thy Youth, and Englands Fame: 2211 All these, and more,...

... Hand, but conquered. Exe. We mourne in black, why mourn we not in blood? Henry is dead, and never shall revive: Upon a Woodden Coffin we attend; And Deaths dishonourable Victorie, We with our stately presence glorifie, Like Captives bound to a Triumphant Carre. What? shall we curse the Planets of Mishap, That plotted thus our Glories overthrow? Or shall we thinke the subt...

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The Life and Death of King Richard the Second

By: William Shakespeare

...t; 656 Though Richard my liues counsell would not heare, 657 My deaths sad tale, may yet vndeafe his eare. 658 Yor. No, it is stop... ...hands, here in the view of men, 1319 I will vnfold some causes of your deaths. 1320 You haue mis- led a Prince, a Royall King, 1321 A happ... ..., and not with Hands: those whom you curse 1498 Haue felt the worst of Deaths destroying hand, 1499 And lye full low, grau’d in the hollow gro... ...e with Woe. 1839 Gard. Goe binde thou vp yond dangling Apricocks, 1840 Which like vnruly Children, make their Syre 1841 Stoupe with op... ...s Death in this rude assalt? 2777 Villaine, thine owne hand yeelds thy deaths instrument, 2778 Go thou and fill another roome in hell. 2779 ...

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The First Part of Henry the Fourth. Edited by Frederic W. Moorman

By: William Shakespeare

...l the Debt he owes vnto you, 509 Euen with the bloody Payment of your deaths: 510 Therefore I say— 511 Wor. Peace Cousin, say no mo... ...am doubtlesse I can purge 1839 My selfe of many I am charg’d withall: 1840 Yet such extenuation let me begge, 1841 As in reproofe of many ... ...end of Life cancells all Bands, 1978 And I will dye a hundred thousand Deaths, 1979 Ere breake the smallest parcell of this Vow. 1980 ... ...of Henry the Fourth Shakespeare: First Folio 2033 many a man doth of a Deaths- Head, or a Memento Mori. 2034 I neuer see thy Face, but I thin... ...71 Dow. Talke not of dying, I am out of feare 2372 Of death, or deaths hand, for this one halfe yeare. 2373 Exeunt Omnes. [f3 S... ...e and stiffe 2936 Vnder the hooues of vaunting enemies, 2937 Whose deaths are vnreueng’d. Prethy lend me thy sword 2938 Fal. O Hal, I...

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The Second Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...Tis that they seeke; and they, in seeking that, 1042 Shall finde their deaths, if Yorke can prophecie. 1043 Salisb. My Lord, breake we of... ... Card. Did he not, contrary to forme of Law, 1353 Deuise strange deaths, for small offences done? 1354 Yorke. And did he not, in his... ... stay my thoghts: 1839 My thoughts, that labour to perswade my soule, 1840 Some violent hands were laid on Humfries life: - 40 - The second ... ...But that the guilt of Murther bucklers thee, 1922 And I should rob the Deaths- man of his Fee, 1923 Quitting thee thereby of ten thousand sham... ...ercy, whil’st ’tis offered you, 2789 Or let a rabble leade you to your deaths. 2790 Who loues the King, and will imbrace his pardon, 2791 ...

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The Merry Wiues of Windsor

By: William Shakespeare

...nds of Moneyes, 52 and Gold, and Siluer, is her Grand- sire vpon his deaths-bed, 53 (Got deliuer to a ioyfull resurrections) giue, when 5... ...e sequell (Master Broome) I suffered the pangs 1775 of three seuerall deaths: First, an intollerable fright, 1776 to be detected with a ieali... ...n Sirha; hold vp your head; an-swere 1839 your Master, be not afraid. 1840 Eua. William, how many Numbers is in Nownes? 1841 Will...

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The Tragedie of Julius C‘Sar

By: William Shakespeare

...he death of Princes 1020 Caes. Cowards dye many times before their deaths, 1021 The valiant neuer taste of death but once: 1022 Of all... ...nke: 1374 If I my selfe, there is no houre so fit 1375 As Caesars deaths houre; nor no Instrument 1376 Of halfe that worth, as those your... ... Breefely, I dwell by the Capitoll. 1839 3. Your name sir, truly. 1840 Cinna. Truly, my name is Cinna. 1841 1. Teare him to p...

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The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus

By: William Shakespeare

...ooke Competitors in loue? 637 I tell you Lords, you doe but plot your deaths, 638 By this deuise. 639 Chi. Aaron, a thousand death... ...faire as you are: 1839 Goe packe with them, and giue the mother gold, 1840 And tell them both the circumstance of all, 1841 And how by thi...

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The Tragedie of Romeo and Juliet

By: William Shakespeare

...omeo: they may seaze 1839 On the white wonder of deare Iuliets hand, 1840 And steale immortall blessing from her lips, 1841 Who euen in p... ... so deepe an O. 1907 Rom. Nurse. 1908 Nur. Ah sir, ah sir, deaths the end of all. 1909 Rom. Speak’st thou of Iuliet? how is i... ...he hath wedded. I will die, 2620 And leaue him all life liuing, all is deaths. 2621 Pa. Haue I thought long to see this mornings face, 26... ...igne yet 2948 Is Crymson in thy lips, and in thy cheekes, 2949 And Deaths pale flag is not aduanced there. 2950 Tybalt, ly’st thou there i...

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The Tragedy of Richard the Third

By: William Shakespeare

...omething into a slower method. 303 Is not the causer of the timelesse deaths 304 Of these Plantagenets, Henrie and Edward, 305 As bl... ...85 Shall for thy loue, kill a farre truer Loue, 386 To both their deaths shalt thou be accessary. 387 An. I would I knew thy heart. ... ...eare the Garland of the Realme. 1839 Hast. How weare the Garland? 1840 Doest thou meane the Crowne? 1841 Cates. I, my good Lord. ... ...endernesse, and milde compassion, 2712 Wept like to Children, in their deaths sad Story. 2713 O thus (quoth Dighton) lay the gentle Babes: 2...

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The Third Part of Henry the Sixth

By: William Shakespeare

...s that which takes hir heauy leaue? 1325 A deadly grone, like life and deaths departing. 1326 See who it is. 1327 Ed. And now the Batt... ...are: First Folio 1839 Euen in the downe- fall of his mellow’d yeeres, 1840 When Nature brought him to the doore of Death? 1841 No Warwick... ...from Winters pow’rfull Winde. 2817 These Eyes, that now are dim’d with Deaths black Veyle, 2818 Haue beene as piercing as the Mid- day Sunne, ... ... a Childe, 3046 Looke in his youth to haue him so cut off. 3047 As deathsmen you haue rid this sweet yong Prince. 3048 King. Away with...

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Tales for Fifteen: Or, Imagination and Heart

By: James Fenimore Cooper

...ins one of James Fenimore Cooper’s least read and least known writings. In 1840, when the Boston publisher George Roberts asked Cooper for a contribut... ...him out of some financial diffi- culties. In a letter to George Roberts in 1840, Cooper said of “Imagination” that “this tale was written on rainy day... ...who were born to her parents, the others having died in their infancy. The deaths of the rest of their children had occa- sioned the affection of her ...

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The Winters Tale

By: William Shakespeare

...old, when ’tis 1839 Oppos’d (as it must be) by th’ powre of the King: 1840 One of these two must be necessities, 1841 Which then will spea... ...too soft for him 2661 (say I:) Draw our Throne into a Sheep- Coat? all deaths - 59 - The Winters Tale Shakespeare: First Folio 2662 are too f... ... 2968 Bohemia stops his eares, and threatens them 2969 With diuers deaths, in death. 2970 Perd. Oh my poore Father: 2971 The Heaue...

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Loues Labour's Lost

By: William Shakespeare

... the world 1839 I recount no fable, some certaine speciall honours it 1840 pleaseth his greatnesse to impart to Armado a Souldier, 1841 a... ...Citterne head. 2564 Dum. The head of a bodkin. 2565 Ber. A deaths face in a ring. 2566 Lon. The face of an old Roman coine, sc...

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The Merchant of Venice

By: William Shakespeare

... 243 sadnesse in his youth.) I had rather to be marri-ed 244 to a deaths head with a bone in his mouth, then to ei-ther 245 of these: Go... ...Ies. Ile tell my husband Lancelet what you say, heere 1839 he comes. 1840 Loren. I shall grow iealous of you shortly Lancelet, 1841 ...

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The Tragedie of Macbeth

By: William Shakespeare

..., and Donalbaine: Malcolme awake, 831 Shake off this Downey sleepe, Deaths counterfeit, - 19 - The Tragedie of Macbeth Shakespeare: First Foli... ...est fell. 1839 Though all things foule, would wear the brows of grace 1840 Yet Grace must still looke so. 1841 Macd. I haue lost my Ho...

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The Tragedie of Cymbeline

By: William Shakespeare

... should render him hourely to your eare, 1839 As truely as he mooues. 1840 Imo. Oh for such meanes, 1841 Though perill to my modestie,... ...e: 2516 Thus smiling, as some Fly had tickled slumber, 2517 Not as deaths dart being laugh’d at: his right Cheeke 2518 Reposing on a Cushi...

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The Second Part of Henry the Fourth

By: William Shakespeare

...oines disguis’d. 1257 Fal. Peace (good Dol) doe not speake like a Deaths-head: 1258 doe not bid me remember mine end. 1259 Dol. S... ...ts Inne, 1839 like a man made after Supper, of a Cheese- paring. When 1840 hee was naked, hee was, for all the world, like a forked 1841 R...

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The Tragedie of Anthonie and Cleopatra

By: William Shakespeare

...u were wrong led, 1839 And we in negligent danger: cheere your heart, 1840 Be you not troubled with the time, which driues 1841 O’re your ... ...urposes, and being Royall 3601 Tooke her owne way: the manner of their deaths, 3602 I do not see them bleede. 3603 Dol. Who was last w...

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In the South Seas

By: Robert Louis Stevenson

.... And depopu- lation works both ways, the doors of death being set wide open, and the door of birth almost closed. Thus, in the half-year ending July ... ... and the door of birth almost closed. Thus, in the half-year ending July 1888 there were twelve deaths and but one birth in the district of the Hatihe... ... backward brother. But, except in these, to- day the peril is a memory. When our generation were yet in the cradle and playroom it was still a living ... ...ble there was a tiny skeleton. The race seems in a fair way to survive. From fifteen islands, whose rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a proport... ...lt, I found a proportion of 59 births to 47 deaths for 1887. Dropping three out of the fifteen, there remained for the other twelve the comfortable ra... ...othian glen, I had accompanied Sunday by Sunday a minister in whose house I lodged; and the likeness, and 164 In The South Seas the difference, and t...

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Mosses from an Old Manse

By: Nathaniel Hawthorne

...he sacred truths of our reli gion, and of saint like lives and triumphant deaths, and of future bliss or misery unutterable, then did Goodman Brown t... ...lle Mere Eve,” 2 tom., 1839; “Roderic; ou le Serpent a l’estomac,” 2 tom., 1840; “Le Culte du Feu,” a folio volume of ponderous research into the reli... ...the leaves of classic volumes; and clerks, likewise, who have caught their deaths on high official stools; and men of genius too, who have written she...

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The English Mail-Coach and Joan of Arc

By: Thomas de Quincey

...permitted me to weep” is one version (Bussey, History of Napoleon, London, 1840, Vol. I, p. 302). Cf. Hazlitt, Life of Napoleon, 2d ed., London, 1852,... ...e very shadow of the catastrophe, being divided from the most frightful of deaths by scarcely more, if more at all, than seventy seconds. “Such was th...

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Beatrix

By: Honoré de Balzac

...came an orphan in 1793. Her property escaped confiscation by reason of the deaths of her father and brother. The first was killed on the 10th of Augus... ...It is forbidden to you to love me; I know that. You will suffer a thousand deaths, you will be betrayed, humiliated, unhappy; but you have in you a de... ...f an idolized husband? T oward the end of the following summer, in August, 1840, Sabine had nearly reached the period when the duty of nurs- ing her f... ... vicars of the faubourg Saint-Germain appointed to a vacant bish- opric in 1840 (an office refused by him for the third time), the Abbe Brossette, one... ...rliest friends, and she alone remained faithful to him. The false alarm of 1840 swept away the last vestige of this stock-gambler’s credit; Aurelie, s...

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Cousin Betty

By: Honoré de Balzac

...ambitious man at the first stage of his career. The political personage of 1840 repre- sents, in some degree, the Abbe of the eighteenth century. No d... ...sh and beautify it- self, that trade did not set up its display there till 1840—the gold of the money-changers, the fairy-work of fashion, and the lux... ...n, gave you strength. The awful disasters that have come upon us since—two deaths, ruin, and the disappearance of Baron Hulot—have occupied your mind ... ...ied, if she is at this moment in Steinbock’s arms, she deserves a thousand deaths! I will kill her as I would smash a fly—” “And how about the gendarm... ...i, of clan- destine passion in the squalid style stamped on it in Paris in 1840. How far, alas! from the adulterous love, symbolized by Vulcan’s nets,...

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Catherine de Medici

By: Honoré de Balzac

...ounded with civil liberty) is the France of to- day. What is the France of 1840? A country occupied exclu- sively with material interests,—without pat... ...eans employed by Catherine, who certainly had to reproach herself with the deaths of Francois II. and Charles IX., whose lives might have been saved i... ...to break through the floors of our modern houses. The jewels of a woman of 1840 would have been the undress ornaments of a great lady in 1540. To-day,... ...erful, am accused of ambition! I am taxed with cruelty,—I who have but two deaths upon my conscience. Even to impartial minds I am still a problem. Do...

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The Lesser Bourgeoisie (The Middle Classes)

By: Honoré de Balzac

...is irremediable sterility. At the time when our history begins, namely, in 1840, 22 The Lesser Bourgeoisie Celeste, then forty-six years old, had cea... ...he poor neglected woman loved her better than her own mother. From 1833 to 1840 she received a brilliant education ac- cording to the ideas of the bou... ...hould have liked my husband to be.” One evening, in the month of February, 1840, the Thuillier salon contained the various personages whose silhouette... ...sted the poisoned apple of passion, undergoes a solemn shock; she sees two deaths before her: that of the body and that of the heart. Dividing women i... ...ncident over carried all four per- sonages into the garden, for, in March, 1840, the weather was spring-like, at least in Paris. “Commander,” said The... ...ption of one of her best dinners. The physiognomy of the bourgeois cook of 1840 is, moreover, one of those details essentially necessary to a history ...

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Typee a Romance of the South Seas

By: Herman Melville

...is other writings. A good part of the succeeding three years, from 1837 to 1840, was occupied with school-teaching. While so engaged at Greenbush, now... ...the spirit of ad- venture in Melville’s breast. That book was published in 1840, and was at once talked of everywhere. Melville must have read it at t... ...e with Europeans, the births would appear not very little to outnumber the deaths; the population in such in- stances remaining nearly the same for se...

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The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley

By: Thomas Hutchinson

...is inward hate. ’Tis bold hypocrisy, For he would gladlier celebrate their deaths, Which I have heard him pray for on his knees: Great God! that such ... ... And whose most favouring Providence was shown Even in the manner of their deaths. For Rocco Was kneeling at the mass, with sixteen others, When the c... ... _120 Princes and kinsmen, at this hideous feast Given at my brothers’ deaths. T wo yet remain, His wife remains and I, whom if ye save not, Ye ma... ...ayer against his child, Be he who asks even what men call me. Will not the deaths of her rebellious brothers Awe her before I speak? For I on them ...

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The Young Step-Mother; Or a Chronicle of Mistakes

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...ry 10th, 1845. 17 The Young Step-Mother Maria Kendal, born September 5th, 1840. Died September 14th, 1840. Sarah Anne Kendal, born October 3rd, 1841.... ...ll would go on the better in their absence, and escaped from the record of deaths and mar- riages, each observing to the other as they left the house,... ...he said; and Gilbert felt as if her look were worse to him than a thousand deaths. 359 The Young Step-Mother ‘O mamma! mamma! Gilbert! let me tell he...

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Memorials and Other Papers

By: Thomas de Quincey

...e very shadow of the catastrophe, being divided from the most frightful of deaths by scarcely more, if more at all, than seventy seconds. Such was the... ...de la Civilisation Morale et Religieuse chez les Grecs: 6 tomes: Groningue—1840), alleges a case (which, however, we do not remember to have met) wher... ...n glades, divided hearts that would either have encountered death, or many deaths, for the other. These were regions of natural peace and tranquillity... ...nd placing himself in an attitude of defence, that he would die a thousand deaths sooner than surrender the sword of his father, the Palsgrave, a prin...

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Democracy in America

By: Alexis de Tocqueville

...volumes of M. de Tocqueville’s work upon American institutions appeared in 1840. In 1838 he was chosen member of the Academy of Moral and Political Sc... ...very parish, in which the results of public deliberations, and the births, deaths, and marriages of the citizens were entered;*** clerks were directed... ...e laws; the town-clerk records all the town votes, orders, grants, births, deaths, and marriages; the treasurer keeps the funds; the overseer of the p... ...d up my undertaking in a spirit not unworthy of suc- cess. A. De T. March, 1840 Chapter I: Philosophical Method Among the Americans I think that in no... ...United States of America have only been emancipated for half a century [in 1840] from the state of colonial depen- dence in which they stood to Great ...

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Moby Dick; Or the Whale

By: Herman Melville

...whale tribe.” —Frederick Debell Bennett’ s Whaling Voyage Round the Globe, 1840. 11 Herman Melville October 13. “There she blows,” was sung out from ... .... One reason perhaps is, that not one in fifty of the actual disasters and deaths by casualties in the fishery, ever finds a public record at home, ho...

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Moby-Dick or the Whale

By: Herman Melville

...e whale tribe.” Frederick Debell Bennett’s Whaling Voyage Round the Globe. 1840. October 13. “There she blows,” was sung out from the mast head. “Wher... ...r. One reason perhaps is, that not one in fifty of the actual disasters and deaths by casualties in the fishery, ever finds a public record at home, howe...

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Measure, For Measure

By: William Shakespeare

...s habitation where thou keepst 1214 Hourely afflict: Meerely, thou art deaths foole, 1215 For him thou labourst by thy flight to shun, 1216 ... ...at beares the name of life? Yet in this life 1243 Lie hid moe thousand deaths; yet death we feare 1244 That makes these oddes, all euen. 1245... ...le dreame, 1839 And racke thee in their fancies. Welcome, how agreed? 1840 Enter Mariana and Isabella. 1841 Isab. Shee’ll take the ent...

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Twelfe Night, Or What You Will

By: William Shakespeare

...th you anon. 1839 Vio. Pray sir, put your sword vp if you please. 1840 And. Marry will I sir: and for that I promis’d you Ile 1841 ... ...nd I most iocund, apt, and willinglie, 2289 To do you rest, a thousand deaths would dye. 2290 Ol. Where goes Cesario? 2291 Vio. A...

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John Keble's Parishes a History of Hursley and Otterbourne

By: Charlotte Mary Yonge

...ion amount to 12s. 9.5d.” * Hursley ceased to be a Peculiar about the year 1840. 13 Charlotte M. Yonge The patronage of the living, when a rectory... ...rke, and of Colpoys himself and Joan his then wife, after their respective deaths. These obits, namely anniversaries of deaths when masses were to be ... ...un- dred,” and was probably more of a village than at present, since up to 1840 there was a pound and stocks opposite to the single farm-house that re... ...irred the fire with a stick all through one winter; and as late as between 1840-50, Mr. Bailey of Hursley still had in his barn the seats that had bee...

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The $30,000 Bequest : And Other Stories

By: Mark Twain

... great state upon the rostrum of the orator of the day, and in November of 1840 he died again. The St. Louis Republican of the 25th of that month spo... ... likely. San Francisco is one eighth as populous as New York; there are 60 deaths a week in the former and 500 a week in the latter—if they have luck.... ...n the former and 500 a week in the latter—if they have luck. That is 3,120 deaths a year in San Francisco, and eight times as many in New York—say abo...

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An Englishman Looks at the World Being a Series of Unrestrained Remarks Upon Contemporary Matters

By: H. G. Wells

...es for the moral, intellectual and material leader- ship of the world? The deaths and accessions of Kings, the changing of names and coins and symbols... .... A vast proportion of these accessions to the American popu- lation since 1840 has, with the exception of the East Euro- pean Jews, consisted of peas...

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The Voyage of the Beagle

By: Charles Darwin

.... For those on Tacna by Mr. Hamilton, see Trans. of British Associa- tion, 1840. For those on Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil. Trans., 1835. In t... ...andering habits increase; and hence the popu- lation, without any apparent deaths from famine, is repressed in a manner extremely sudden compared to w...

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Master Francis Rabelais Five Books of the Lives, Heroic Deeds and Sayings of Gargantua and His Son Pantagruel

By: Thomas Urquhart

...ed. They are radically false, and therefore both worthless and harmful. In 1840 there appeared in the Bibliotheque Charpentier the Rabelais in a singl... ...all use of reason and common language, what I had rather suffer a thousand deaths, if it were pos- sible, than have thought; as who should make bread ...

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