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Possible misspelling? More dictionaries have definitions for loranlorca -- could that be what you meant?

law or religious custom as necessarily
She had ceased to take a system cut and dried from the Venturists, or any one else; she had ceased to think of whole classes of civilised society with abhorrence and contempt; and there had dawned in her that temper which is in truth implied in all the more majestic conceptions of the State—the temper that regards the main institutions of every great civilisation, whether it be property, or law, or religious custom, as necessarily, in some degree, divine and sacred.
— from Marcella by Ward, Humphry, Mrs.

line of rocky cliffs affording no
To the northward the coast for miles was one continued line of rocky cliffs, affording no chance of life to those who might be dashed upon them; but to the southward of the cliff which formed the promontory opposite to Forster's cottage, and which terminated the range, there was a deep indent in the line of coast, forming a sandy and nearly land-locked bay, small indeed, but so sheltered that any vessel which could run in might remain there in safety until the gale was spent.
— from Newton Forster by Frederick Marryat

light or rather cast a new
But the manner of her leaving the room seemed to throw a new light, or rather cast a new kind of shadow on the case.
— from Tempest-Driven: A Romance (Vol. 1 of 3) by Richard Dowling

like old Roman circuses and now
The eye was never weary in detecting the natural architecture of the mountain acclivities, which, in the constantly varying scenery, formed amphitheatres like old Roman circuses, and now square battlemented crags, like crumbling castles on the Rhine, and again a deep, shady ravine of unknown depth, where lonely mist-wreaths rested like snowdrifts.
— from Due West; Or, Round the World in Ten Months by Maturin Murray Ballou

League of Republican Clubs and now
During the previous summer in Washington, I had met General James S. Clarkson, then president of the National League of Republican Clubs; and now, on his invitation, in the Spring of 1891, Rich and I went to Louisville to speak before the national convention of the league.
— from Under the Prophet in Utah; the National Menace of a Political Priestcraft by Frank J. Cannon


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