, 627 , 699 Platt, Jr., James, q. , 1 Plays Autocrat of the Coffee Stall, The , Chapin, 556 , 563 Beaux' Stratagem , Farquhar, q. , 587 , 588 Bold Stroke for a Wife, A , Centlivre, q. , 554 Boston, first performed in, 111 Bottega di Caffè, La , Goldoni, 555 Café; ou, l'Ecossaise, Le , Voltaire, 556 Caffè, Le , Rosseau, 554 , 555 Caffè di Campagna, Il , Galuppi, 556 Caffettiéra da Spirito, La , 556 Coffee House, The , Rosseau, 88 Coffee House; or, Fair Fugitive, The , Voltaire, q. , 556 Coffee-House Politician, The , Fielding, q. , 554 , 555 Devin du Village , Rousseau, 102 "English comedy," q. , 61 Foire St. Germain, La , Dancourt (1696), q. , 554 Hamilton , Hamlin and Arliss, q ., ill. , 556 Persian Wife, The , Goldoni, q. , 556 Socrates , Voltaire, 556 Tarugo's Wiles; or, the Coffee House , St. Serf, q. , 554 Pleasure gardens ( see Gardens ) Pletzer, q. , 185 Pluehart, inv. , 710 Plunket (highwayman), 578 Pneumatic Scale Corp., 471 , 472 Pneumatic Scale Corp., Ltd., 471 Pocoke, Edward, q. , 12 , 38 Pods, 329 Poemata Didascalia , d'Olivet, 543 Poems " As long as Mocha's happy tree ," Pope's, q. , 549 Ballad of the South Sea Scheme , Swift, q. , 571 Bouquet Blanc et le Bouquet Noir, Le , Mery, 548 Café, Le (anon.), 548 Café, Le , Berchoux, 548 Caffè, Il , Barotti, 548 Cap and Bells , Keats, q. , 550 Carmen Caffaeum , Massieu, q. , 14 , 544–547 City Mouse and Country Mouse , Prior and Montague, q. , 551 Coffee , Saltus, q. , 552 Coffee—a Chanson (music by Colet), ill. , 594 , 595 Coffee and Crumpets , "Littledo," q. , 550 , 551 C. Companion (from Arabic), q. , 543 Coffee Slips, The , Hood, q. , 550 Comus , Milton, q. , 549 de Clieu , Esménard, q. , 8 , 548 Flogé du Café , L'Estienne, 548 Frugality , Pope Leo XIII, q. , 549 Gilbert K. Chesterton Rises to the Toast of C. , Untermeyer, q. , 553 Giorno, Il , Parini, q. , 548 , 549 Grandeur de Dieu dans les Merveilles de la Nature, La , 548 In Praise of C. (from Arabic), q. ,
— from All About Coffee by William H. (William Harrison) Ukers
Note 49 ( return ) [ I have collected these pecuniary circumstances from Pachymer, (l. xi.
— from The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Table of Contents with links in the HTML file to the two Project Gutenberg editions (12 volumes) by Edward Gibbon
In any case, the Spaniards entered the town without further opposition, and put it to the sack with such brutality that the memories of it are said to have disturbed the last moments of Giovanni, the future Pope, Leo X. This cruelty at least did its work.
— from Europe in the Sixteenth Century, 1494-1598, Fifth Edition Period 4 (of 8), Periods of European History by A. H. (Arthur Henry) Johnson
Pope Pius VII. issued an Encyclical directed against their insidious and dangerous doctrines, which was followed by another from Pope Leo XII.
— from The War Upon Religion Being an Account of the Rise and Progress of Anti-Christianism in Europe by Francis A. (Francis Aloysius) Cunningham
—The following letter from Rome, written by order of the Holy Father, Pope Leo XII., has been received by the Rev. Dr. J. J. Moriarty, pastor of St. John the Evangelist's church of Syracuse, N. Y.: Rome , Feb. 7, 1886.
— from Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 4, April, 1886 by Various
Its first heroic act was the taking of the Bastille; the cruel deeds which marked its close had for their scene the former Place Louis XV., which the Revolution had now named after itself.
— from Old and New Paris: Its History, Its People, and Its Places, v. 1 by H. Sutherland (Henry Sutherland) Edwards
When the iniquitous law was yet before the Chamber the Holy Father, Pope Leo XIII., in a letter to the superior generals of the orders and religious institutes, complained bitterly of its purpose: We have endeavored by every means to ward off from you a persecution so unworthy, and at the same time to save your country from evils as great as they are unmerited.
— from The War Upon Religion Being an Account of the Rise and Progress of Anti-Christianism in Europe by Francis A. (Francis Aloysius) Cunningham
Christie, March 18, 1904 99 15 0 {200} Fauteuils, pair, Louis XVI. (stamped "J. Leglartier"), tapered oblong backs and curved arms, turned legs, white and gilt, covered with Beauvais tapestry, with subjects from "Fables de la Fontaine," and other designs.
— from Chats on Old Furniture: A Practical Guide for Collectors by Arthur Hayden
(reigned 1509 to 1547) was surnamed Bluff King Hal on account of his bluff manners; he also received the title of Defender of the Faith from Pope Leo X., in recognition of the tract he published against the heresy of Martin Luther.
— from Names: and Their Meaning; A Book for the Curious by Leopold Wagner
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