and are to be sold by Francis Coles at his shop in the O.Ī St. B." This Peter Bales was a famous chirographist who kept a school at the upper In Hubburd, speaks of "the best hand that ever old Peter Bales hung out in the Of the ways of robbers to "step into the O. Dekker, in Jests, speaks of thieves being "indighted for it at theīlack bar in the old bayly." In Bellman, he advises those who want to learn more Jests, we read of an old gentleman who sojourned in "the O. Xxiii, the Sheriff says, "The gibbet was set up by noon in the O. Opposite were intended, which were well known because they rang the passing knell Middlesex." In the Nursery Rhyme of Oranges and Lemons, one distich runs: "When B., by virtue of his HighnessĬommission of Oyer and Terminer, for gaol delivery, for Lond. The Peace, sitting at the Sessions House in the O. B.," andĪgain: "My Lord Mayor, maister recorder, and other of his Majesty's Justices of Is stated that the trial was conducted "at the Sessions House in the O. In the True Report of the Arraignment of a seminary Priest (1607), it from the corner of Newgate and the Holborn viaduct retains The city wall between Lud Gate and New Gate. Or base court of a feudal castle, because it lay behind the ancient Bailey of The central criminal court of Lond., so called from the Latin "Ballium," the outer ruled the roast more hotly than ever did the Triumviri of Rome." Dekker, in Wonderful Year, says in reference to the Plague: "The 3 bald sextons of limping St. The registers contain a long list of names with the letter "P" added, to indicate that they died of the Plague. Its graveyard was much used during the visitations of the Plague. near the Tower, at the corner of Hart St. 1, 403, says that Moloch led Solomon to build his temple "right against the temple of God On that opprobrious hill." In 416, he calls it "that hill of scandal," and in 443, "the offensive mtn."Īn old Lond. It received its name from the temples built there by Solomon for the gods of his foreign wives (I Kings xi, 7). 545, tells how Alcides "Lichas from the top of O. 8, 2, calls Hercules "the great OEtean knight." 4, 832, Onophrius speaks of being burnt to death: " Tanquam Herculem Own pile and the flame transform itself into a constellation." In Fraunce's Says, "Would this were O.: That, like the furious Theban, I might build mine that Herakles built the funeral pyre on which he flung himself and perished. mt., And to the bounds of fertile Thessaly.'' It was on the summit Heywood's B.Īge i., Meleager says, "I Meleager, rich Aetolia's heir, Whose large dominions Is in both cases pronounced as a trisyllable. Jointed again and made tall masts, defy Those angry winds that split them." O. 3, where Maximus says, "Goodly cedars, Rent from O. Simile pleased the authors, for it is repeated in Valentinian by a sweeping tempest, jointedĪgain and made a mast, defies Those angry winds that split him." Evidently the 's mount," and not rain them on Caesar and his Romans? In B. 4, 348, Cato asks "Why would Jove throw them down on O. Mitford's conjecture"Ethiopian"mayġ vii., Elinor says, "Should'st thou In deserts O. crowned with conquest" The 1st edition has OEalia, but it is an obvious misprint. 542, tells the story of the death of "Alcides, from O. of Eretria, and a 3rd in Thessaly on the Peneus, not far from Ithome. The place where Herakles conquered Eurytus shortly before his own death: 3 cities at least claimed to be the scene of this story one in Messenia in the Plain of Stenyclerus, another in Euboea in the dist. The Crudities, says of it that it is "A work that will eternize thee till GodĬome, And for thy sake thy famous parish O." from the Great Mogul." Sydenham, in verses prefixed to 7, Horten says, "This stone of a strange form and colour was brought by the are now there suspended." In Nabbes' Bride Verses prefixed to the Crudities (1611), he says, "How well and often his shoes through Europe he hung up his shoes in the church at O. Here ThomasĬoryat, the author of Crudities, was born, and when he returned from his tramp 2, 372, Imogen says, "I may wander From East to O. "Ere twice in murk and occidental damp Moist Hesperus part of the sky and the countries of the W., i.e.Ħ7, Bolingbroke speaks of clouds dimming the bright passage of the sun "to the And Nigra Sylva, where the devils dance." ![]() Reports: "I crossed the sea and came to O. Its ruins still remain at Stomogil on the Bug. A Greek colony in Scythia, on the Hypanis, abt. 78, Satan is described as viewing the earth "From Eden over Pontes, and the Pool Maeotis, up beyond the river Ob." direction into the Gulf of Obi in the Arctic Ocean.
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