The progresses and public processions of Queen Elizabeth: Among which are interspersed other solemnities, public expenditures, and remarkable events during the reign of that illustrious princessCollected from original manuscripts, scarce pamphlets, corporation records, parochial registers, &c., &cIllustrated, with historical notes . y, styled featharing jand, in the language of Milton, form the fan of Aurora ; which, when waved by the breeze of themorning, occasions the rustling that constitutes a third in the complex sound referred to. Thus,Mr. Whately, the first authority in the language of


The progresses and public processions of Queen Elizabeth: Among which are interspersed other solemnities, public expenditures, and remarkable events during the reign of that illustrious princessCollected from original manuscripts, scarce pamphlets, corporation records, parochial registers, &c., &cIllustrated, with historical notes . y, styled featharing jand, in the language of Milton, form the fan of Aurora ; which, when waved by the breeze of themorning, occasions the rustling that constitutes a third in the complex sound referred to. Thus,Mr. Whately, the first authority in the language of picturesque description:— Large boughsfeathering down, often intercept the sight. 1 Place means a seat, a mansion, a residence. See Mr. Steevenss note on As you like it, actII. scene 3. 2 The proper situation of houses began to be attended to in this reign. Lord Bacon, who publishedhis Essays before the end of it, says, in his forty-fifth, he that builds a fair house upon an ill seat,committeth himself to prison. Neither do I reckon it an ill seat only where the air is unwholesome,but likewise where the air is unequal; as you shall see many fine seats set upon a knap of ground envi-roned with higher hills round about it, whereby the heat of the sun is pent in, and the wind gatherethas in troughs, &c. .Jkushbrooke ddu-t. Malcolm satlv. ANCIENT- STATVE-AT-HAWSTED- PLACE SVFFOLK as it new remains Brcnm to a Scale ofa Inch to a foot. THE &UEEN AT HAWSTED, 1578. *21 ilight of steps, and a strong brick bridge of three arches, through a small jealouswicket, formed in the great well-timbered gate, that rarely grated on its hinges. Immediately upon your peeping through the wicket, the first object that una-voidably struck you, was a stone figure of Hercules \ as it was called, holding inonehand a club across his shoulders, the other resting on one hip, discharging aperennial stream of water, by the urinary passage, into a carved stone bason. Onthe pedestal of the statue is pr


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectprocession, booksubjectvisitsofstate