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Page "Sir William Gull, 1st Baronet" ¶ 5
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clergyman and
A parish clergyman also adopts Gertrude s teachings and the work of Gertrude, Glüphi and the clergyman are helped by Arner, a politician, who solicits aid from the state.
Glasgow s Episcopal clergy had been operating outside the law ( non-juror ), but in 1712 a clergyman arrived prepared to take the oath to make him qualified.
* Herbert Palmer, English Puritan clergyman, member of the Westminster Assembly, and President of Queens College, Cambridge, lived in the village

clergyman and teaching
She graduated from the seminary at age sixteen and that same year became a member of the Congregational Church and began teaching at a Presbyterian church in Burlington, New Jersey and worked as a governess for the family of clergyman William Van Rensselaer.

clergyman and however
When confronted with the painting, the king, however, interpreted it as a conspiracy-the real sun of course being himself threatened by competing fake suns, one being Olaus Petri and the other the clergyman and scholar Laurentius Andreae ( 1470 – 1552 ), both thus accused of treachery, but eventually escaping capital punishment.
After the riots, however, scientist and clergyman Joseph Priestley argued in his An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Birmingham Riots ( 1791 ) that this cooperation had not in fact been as amicable as generally believed.
As a clergyman, he expected to have ample opportunity to carry out his educational ideas, however the failure of his first sermon and influence from philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau led him to pursue a career in law and political justice.
A longer Epic Cycle, as described by the 9th-century CE scholar and clergyman Photius in his Bibliotheca, also included the Titanomachy and the Theban Cycle, which in turn comprised the Oedipodea, the Thebaid, the Epigoni and the Alcmeonis ; however, it is certain that none of the cyclic epics ( other than Homer ) survived to Photius ' day, and it is likely that Proclus and Photius were not referring to a canonical collection.
* Macedonian Orthodox Church – Ohrid Archbishopric, formed in 1967 by a former Serbian Orthodox clergyman, however it is not recognized by any other autocephalous church.
The Syrian clergyman, however, tells a different story about the icon's provenance than that adopted by the Russian Orthodox Church.
In the color years, however, Bee's suitors are respectable gentlemen and include a retired congressman, a clergyman, and a distinguished professor.
" While writing the libretto, however, Gilbert took note of the criticism he had received for his very mild satire of a clergyman in The Sorcerer, and looked about for an alternative pair of rivals.
Having been brought up among Presbyterians, however, and having an investigating turn of mind, instead of quietly learning Methodist theology he troubled his teacher with questions of election, universal salvation, and many other subjects, until it was politely hinted that he was more likely to succeed in life as a farmer than as a clergyman.
The 9th-century AD scholar and clergyman Photius, in his Bibliotheca, considered the Theban Cycle part of the Epic Cycle ; however, modern scholars normally do not.
The most plausible accounts, however, indicate the river was named for clergyman John Buchannon, a missionary who explored the region in the 1780s.

clergyman and seems
Sterne seems to have been destined to become a clergyman, and was ordained as a deacon in March 1737 and as a priest in August, 1738.
Unusually for a clergyman in those times, he seems to have possessed a fair amount of scientific knowledge.
Scholar, composer and clergyman, Obrecht seems to have had a succession of short appointments, two of which ended in less than ideal circumstances.
After attending the Collège du Plessis in Paris, he seems to have acquired a vocational interest in becoming a clergyman, but after studying theology in the Jansenist schools for some years, his interests turned away from the Church.
Bayly never married and she seems to have spent her adult life living in with her two married sisters and her brother, a clergyman in Bosbury in Herefordshire.

clergyman and have
This clergyman should have referred to Shakespeare's dictum: `` So-so is a good, very good, very excellent maxim.
Of the first, a clergyman near Cambridge, Babbage said, " I fear I did not derive from it all the advantages that I might have done.
Lady Eleanor Butler ( a young widow, daughter of John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury ) and Edward were alleged to have been precontracted ; both parties were dead by this time, but a clergyman ( named only by Philippe de Commines as Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells ), claimed to have carried out the ceremony.
Any ship owned by the company of more than 500 tons was to have a Church of England clergyman on board.
They are anomalies in the English ecclesiastical law, having no parish area, but being able to have an Anglican clergyman licensed there.
Before his execution, Turpin was frequented by visitors ( the gaoler was reputed to have earned £ 100 from selling drinks to Turpin and his guests ), although he refused the efforts of a local clergyman who offered him " serious remonstrances and admonitions ".
Since then, there have been English translation by the clergyman John Rodwell in 1861, E. H. Palmer in 1880, both show in their works a number of mistakes of mistranslation and misinterpretation, which brings into question their primary aim.
Although an efficient clergyman, varying estimates have been found of his character.
People who have either been attracted to Cambuslang, or who have gone out from there to make a mark on the world include a saint, a king, a queen, a cardinal, a bishop, a lord, a famous manufacturer, a garden designer, at least three significant clergyman, a famous retailer, a miners ' leader, a leader of the RAF, a physicist, several poets, at least one writer and two historians, a pop singer and a boxer
They have two sons, Peter ( a diplomat ) and Andrew ( a Church of England clergyman ).
The importance of the battle was considered so great that the French clergyman and statesman Cardinal Richelieu was reported to have described it as " the battle that saved civilization.
Handsome Mary is said to have been the daughter of a clergyman from Lexington, Kentucky.
He had no known direct contacts with the clergyman, so he might have been infected by one of the clergyman's friends or relatives who visited him during his illness, or by passing the clergyman in the street.
The manuscript is later found in the collection of Thomas Wilkins ( d. 1699 ), a Welsh clergyman and antiquarian, who may have borrowed it from the Mansels without ever returning it.
It is said to have been discovered, in 1857, by Ethan Allen Grosh and Hosea Ballou Grosh, sons of a Pennsylvania clergyman, trained mineralogists and veterans of the California gold fields.
William Laurence Sullivan ( November 15, 1872 — October 5, 1935 ) was an American Unitarian clergyman, prolific author and literary critic, whose Letters to His Holiness, Pope Pius X ( 1910 ), was the last work by a U. S. author to have been placed on Vatican's list of prohibited books ( Index Librorum Prohibitorum ).
He was the only resident Anglican clergyman, in fact the only clergy man west of Kingston and built the first church in Upper Canada to have regular services, St. Marks, at Niagara-on-the-Lake.

clergyman and been
This dinner was the start of a new blatancy in the relationship between the gangs and the politicians, which, prior to 1924, says Pasley, `` had been maintained with more or less stealth '', but which henceforth was marked by these ostentatious gatherings, denounced by a clergyman as `` Belshazzar feasts '', at which `` politicians fraternized cheek by jowl with gangsters, openly, in the big downtown hotels ''.
Abbot has been confused with others of the same name and has been described as a clergyman, which he never was.
In the absence of a crown ( the crown had recently been lost with all the rest of his father's treasure in a wreck in East Anglia ) a simple golden band was placed on the young boy's head, not by the Archbishop of Canterbury ( who was at this time supporting Prince Louis " the Lion ", the future king of France ) but by another clergyman — either Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester, or Cardinal Guala Bicchieri, the Papal legate.
In the early seventeenth century, the endowment of Thomas Tesdale — a merchant from nearby Abingdon — and Richard Wightwick — a clergyman from Berkshire — enabled the conversion of the Broadgates Hall, which had been a University hostel for law students since its construction in the fifteenth century, to form the basis of a fully fledged college.
His family had been in Massachusetts Bay since 1632, and his father, Aaron Bancroft, was distinguished as a revolutionary soldier, a leading Unitarian clergyman and author of a popular life of George Washington.
As a schoolgirl, she had been moved by hearing Unitarian clergyman Robert Collyer lecture.
This is illustrated by the Chancellor's original jurisdiction over feoffments to uses, which came from his original status as a clergyman, as charity had been originally enforced by the Church and the ecclesiastical courts.
Robinson, who had been a beneficed clergyman near Yarmouth, had replied in An Answer to a Censorious Epistle ; and Hall published ( 1610 ) A Common Apology against the Brownists, a lengthy treatise answering Robinson paragraph by paragraph.
Bowra's parents went back to China in February 1905, leaving their children in the care of their paternal grandmother, who, having been widowed, lived with her second husband, a clergyman, in Putney.
She herself has been on the island for only four days ; she came with an elderly priest to evacuate another clergyman, only to find the Japanese had gotten there first.
Moorehead was born in Clinton, Massachusetts, of English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh ancestry, to a Presbyterian clergyman, John Henderson Moorehead, and his wife, the former Mildred McCauley, who had been a singer.
In paper heraldry it is a depiction of the protective cloth covering ( often of linen ) worn by knights from their helmets to stave off the elements, and, secondarily, to decrease the effects of sword-blows against the helmet in battle, from which it is usually shown tattered or cut to shreds ; less often it is shown as an intact drape, principally in those cases where a clergyman uses a helmet and mantling ( to symbolise that, despite the perhaps contradictory presence of the helmet, the clergyman has not been involved in combat ), although this is usually the artist's discretion and done for decorative rather than symbolic reasons.
In addition to his scholarly pursuits, Morgan was a clergyman of the Church of England, having been ordained in 1568 by the Bishop of Ely.
There had been no resident clergyman for 150 years.
He had been most sedulous as a parochial clergyman.
He had been a tutor of Balliol and a clergyman since 1842 and had devoted himself to the work of tuition: his pupils became his friends for life.
Despite being the son of a clergyman, Fowler had been an atheist for quite some time, though he rarely spoke of his beliefs in public.

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