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Page "Kemsing" ¶ 17
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Kemsing and its
The Women's Institute organisation opened its first institute in Kent in Kemsing in December 1915.

Kemsing and well
Its church, the oldest parts of which date from the 13th Century, is dedicated to St Peter and St Paul: the ecclesiastical parish only became separate from Kemsing in 1874, although there may well have been a Saxon church on the site of the present building.

Kemsing and by
The village lies in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and Kemsing Down Reserve, managed by Kemsing Parish Council and Sevenoaks District Council, lies above the village on the North Downs.
Crime in the Kemsing fell by 31 percent in the period 2010-2011.

Kemsing and .
* Kemsing Down ( O. S.
* 1 June 1874: Otford to Maidstone East line, with Kemsing, Borough Green, West Malling, Barming and Maidstone East stations opening with the line.
Kemsing is reputed to be the site of a Roman watermill at Springhead, which was excavated in 1949.
Kemsing is a village and civil parish in the Sevenoaks District of Kent, England.
Kemsing was the birthplace, in AD961, of Saint Edith of Wilton, an illegitimate daughter of the Saxon King Edgar I.
Another local legend states that the knights who murdered Archbishop Thomas Becket rode through Kemsing on their way to seek him out at Canterbury.
Following his canonisation Kemsing became a stop-off place on the Pilgrims ' Way, along which pilgrims travelled to visit the saint's shrine at Canterbury Cathedral.
Wounded soldiers from the western front were returned to England and the hall at Kemsing was one of many facilities in the south east of England used during the war.
One mile ( 2 km ) south-east of the village lies Kemsing railway station.
* The Story of Kemsing in Kent V. E. Bowden, 1994, Kemsing Historical and Art Society, ISBN 0-9504703-2-5
The Mossang, Rongrang, Morang, Yougli, Sanke, Longphi, Haisa, and Kemsing tribes are mostly Christian.
Kemsing railway station serves Kemsing in Kent, England, although the station is actually located on the other side of the M26 motorway to the village.
In 1879 he moved to Wybornes, a house which he took ( it is not known whether he bought or rented it ) near Kemsing in Kent.
* Ash, Brasted, Chevening and Sundridge, Crockenhill and Well Hill, Dunton Green and Riverhead, Eynsford, Farningham, Horton Kirby and South Darenth, Fawkham and West Kingsdown, Halstead, Knockholt and Badgers Mount, Hextable, Kemsing, Otford and Shoreham, Seal and Weald, Sevenoaks Eastern, Sevenoaks Kippington, Sevenoaks Northern, Sevenoaks Town and St John ’ s, Swanley Christchurch and Swanley Village, Swanley St Mary ’ s, Swanley White Oak, and Westerham and Crockham Hill.

has and its
The Brahmaputra has its headwaters in the tableland of the world, the towering white headwalls of the Himalayas that are unknown to man as any other space on the planet.
Southern resentment has been over the method of its ending, the invasion, and Reconstruction ; ;
The North should thank its stars that such has been the case ; ;
As it is, they consider that the North is now reaping the fruits of excess egalitarianism, that in spite of its high standard of living the `` American way '' has been proved inferior to the English and Scandinavian ways, although they disapprove of the socialistic features of the latter.
For lawyers, reflecting perhaps their parochial preferences, there has been a special fascination since then in the role played by the Supreme Court in that transformation -- the manner in which its decisions altered in `` the switch in time that saved nine '', President Roosevelt's ill-starred but in effect victorious `` Court-packing plan '', the imprimatur of judicial approval that was finally placed upon social legislation.
While sovereignty has roots in antiquity, in its present usage it is essentially modern.
Thus we are compelled to face the urbanization of the South -- an urbanization which, despite its dramatic and overwhelming effects upon the Southern culture, has been utterly ignored by the bulk of Southern writers.
But the South is, and has been for the past century, engaged in a wide-sweeping urbanization which, oddly enough, is not reflected in its literature.
In a mere half-century the South has more than tripled its urban status.
Thus Faulkner reminds us, and wisely, that the `` new '' South has gradually evolved out of the Old South, and consequently its agrarian roots persist.
As capitalism in the 20th century has become increasingly dependent upon force and violence for its survival, the private detective is placed in a serious dilemma.
But while the corporation has all the disadvantages of the socialist form of organization ( so cumbersome it cannot constructively do much of anything not compatible with its need to perpetuate itself and maintain its status quo ), unluckily it does not have the desirable aspect of socialism, the motivation to operate for the benefit of society as a whole.
Neither the vibrant enthusiasm which bespeaks a people's intuitive sense of the fitness of things at climactic moments nor the vital argumentation betraying its sense that something significant has transpired was in evidence.
It has lost its ground of being and floats in a mist of appearances.
Precisely at the moment when it has lost its vision the mind of the community turns out from itself in a search for the ontological standard whereby it can measure itself.
Moreover its posture of stubborn but simple resistance is doomed to failure because of the metaphysical weakness of the existent form of order, once the activation of change has reached visible proportions.
But a writer who has a taste for irony and who sees incest in all its modern dimensions can let his imagination work on the disturbing joke in the incest myth, the joke that strikes right at the center of man's humanness.
This life has its own currents and rhythms, its own multiple cycles and adaptations.
In his effort to stir the public from its lethargy, Steele goes so far as to list Catholic atrocities of the sort to be expected in the event of a Stuart Restoration, and, with rousing rhetoric, he asserts that the only preservation from these `` Terrours '' is to be found in the laws he has so tediously cited.
One of the most salient features of literary value has been deemed to be its influence upon and organization of emotion.
Again, he may discover embodied within its texture a theme or idea that has been presented elsewhere and at other times in various ways.
Certainly one of the most important comments that can be made upon the spiritual and cultural life of any period of Western civilization during the past sixteen or seventeen centuries has to do with the way in which its leaders have read and interpreted the Bible.
Ramillies And The Union With Scotland has fewer high spots than Blenheim and much less of its dramatic unity.

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