FATE XXXIV MY LORD'S MIND XXXV
— from Blind Love by Wilkie Collins
This same yere the kyng faught with the Frensshmen at Scluse, where there were sclayn of Frensshmen xxx m l ; and the kyng toke and scomfyted at the sayd bataill of Scluse cccx schippes.
— from A Chronicle of London from 1089 to 1483 Written in the Fifteenth Century, and for the First Time Printed from MSS. in the British Museum by Anonymous
1340] the kyng faught with the Frensshmen at Scluse, where there were sclayn of Frensshmen xxx m l ; and the kyng toke and scomfyted at the sayd bataill of Scluse cccx schippes.”
— from A Chronicle of London from 1089 to 1483 Written in the Fifteenth Century, and for the First Time Printed from MSS. in the British Museum by Anonymous
The Holy Yhiordes IV An Old Acquaintance V The Girl Who Wasn't Wanted VI Moonlight and Poetry VII Ryanne Tables His Cards VIII The Purloined Cable IX The Bitter Fruit X Mahomed Laughs XI Episodic XII The Caravan in the Desert XIII Not a Cheerful Outlook XIV Mahomed Offers Freedom XV Fortune's Riddle Solved XVI Mahomed Rides Alone XVII Mrs. Chedsoye Has Her Doubts XVIII The Man Who Didn't Care XIX Fortune Decides XX March Hares XXI A Bottle of Wine XXII
— from The Carpet from Bagdad by Harold MacGrath
de la Civilisation en France , xvii me leçon.
— from History of European Morals From Augustus to Charlemagne (Vol. 2 of 2) by William Edward Hartpole Lecky
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