Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Anglo-Saxon Histoey Illustrated By : , T...
Gramner rofey belong to this stock . GnEATiNa is the name of places in Suffb ^ There is Creaton ^ in Northampton v ^ Okess is the root of Cressing , found as the name of a place in Essex , and in Cressinghani , Norfolk .
Cbibling is the n ^ Ckoc ^ Cambridgeshire , Iiincolnshire , Cheshire ) , Croxhall , "Derby , Croxby , LincolnshirejGroxall , Stafford and Gruxton , Dorset . Crocker is a name of this stock
Ceii 0 is found in Crudwell , Wilts , and Grudging , in Crudgington , Salop .:, ;" ¦ ' . ¦ Cub is found inflected in Oubbington , Warwick ; Oidbberley , Gloucestershire , and Cubbington , Bucks ,
Gudb or GuD % is found in Cudwprth , Somerset , and West York ; Cudham , Kerit Giiddesden , Oxon , and inflected as Gudding , in 0 uddingtdn v ^ Cijpf is a name ; Cuffing and Cufling a ^ Directory . ¦¦ vv " -i and in Gullingw-orth , West York , and C ^
Culvbr ( a dove or pigeon ) is a name ; but its affinities cannot be well determined . Qumming is a name . Curling is a nam e . Gushing is a name . Cutting is a name .
Liberty of the Subject . —The following is a brief summary of the rights and privileges which our forefathers won for us , and which we now enjoy . Every subject of the United Kingdom is born free . He cannot be sold as a slave ; neither can he » be put to death , banished , removed , or impi-isoned , except by the judgment of a court of justice . He has a right to live in his own country wherever he pleases , and to leave it when he chooses , His property cannot be interfered with except by operation of law . He may petition the sovereign or parliament ] He
may appeal to the law , and its remedies cannot be denied to him . By thejl ^ mous statute , called the " Habeas Corpus Act / ' any person who is inaprisonedjn ay sue out a writ which entitles him to be taken into open court , there to learnthe reason of his imprisonment , and to show , if he can , that he is improperly detained ; and should he succeed in so doing , he is entitled to be discharged from custody . Under the equally famous Bill of Rights ( passed shortly after the accession of William and Mary to the throne vacated by James lb ) , the authority of parliament
and the freedom of the subject are irrevocably confirmed . Moi'eover , our press is now absolutely free ; no permission is required for the publication of any news , or any comments upon it . Lord Canning eloquently maintained that " he who , speculating on the British constitution , should omit from his enumeration the mighty powers of public opinion embodied in a free press , which pervades and checks , and perhaps in the last resort nearly governs the whole , would give but an imperfect view of the government of England . "—How we are Governed ; hy Albany Fonblanme .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Anglo-Saxon Histoey Illustrated By : , T...
Gramner rofey belong to this stock . GnEATiNa is the name of places in Suffb ^ There is Creaton ^ in Northampton v ^ Okess is the root of Cressing , found as the name of a place in Essex , and in Cressinghani , Norfolk .
Cbibling is the n ^ Ckoc ^ Cambridgeshire , Iiincolnshire , Cheshire ) , Croxhall , "Derby , Croxby , LincolnshirejGroxall , Stafford and Gruxton , Dorset . Crocker is a name of this stock
Ceii 0 is found in Crudwell , Wilts , and Grudging , in Crudgington , Salop .:, ;" ¦ ' . ¦ Cub is found inflected in Oubbington , Warwick ; Oidbberley , Gloucestershire , and Cubbington , Bucks ,
Gudb or GuD % is found in Cudwprth , Somerset , and West York ; Cudham , Kerit Giiddesden , Oxon , and inflected as Gudding , in 0 uddingtdn v ^ Cijpf is a name ; Cuffing and Cufling a ^ Directory . ¦¦ vv " -i and in Gullingw-orth , West York , and C ^
Culvbr ( a dove or pigeon ) is a name ; but its affinities cannot be well determined . Qumming is a name . Curling is a nam e . Gushing is a name . Cutting is a name .
Liberty of the Subject . —The following is a brief summary of the rights and privileges which our forefathers won for us , and which we now enjoy . Every subject of the United Kingdom is born free . He cannot be sold as a slave ; neither can he » be put to death , banished , removed , or impi-isoned , except by the judgment of a court of justice . He has a right to live in his own country wherever he pleases , and to leave it when he chooses , His property cannot be interfered with except by operation of law . He may petition the sovereign or parliament ] He
may appeal to the law , and its remedies cannot be denied to him . By thejl ^ mous statute , called the " Habeas Corpus Act / ' any person who is inaprisonedjn ay sue out a writ which entitles him to be taken into open court , there to learnthe reason of his imprisonment , and to show , if he can , that he is improperly detained ; and should he succeed in so doing , he is entitled to be discharged from custody . Under the equally famous Bill of Rights ( passed shortly after the accession of William and Mary to the throne vacated by James lb ) , the authority of parliament
and the freedom of the subject are irrevocably confirmed . Moi'eover , our press is now absolutely free ; no permission is required for the publication of any news , or any comments upon it . Lord Canning eloquently maintained that " he who , speculating on the British constitution , should omit from his enumeration the mighty powers of public opinion embodied in a free press , which pervades and checks , and perhaps in the last resort nearly governs the whole , would give but an imperfect view of the government of England . "—How we are Governed ; hy Albany Fonblanme .