86 resultados para Possession of legitimacy
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"Preface" signed: John W. Ford.
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El vol. II se publicó con tít.: "Controuersias antiguas y modernas de la mission de la gran China ...", según Quetif, J. (Fuente: Wellcome Library: This work was to consist of three volumes. The 2d vol, printed complete (?) Madrid 1679, is supposed to have been suppressed by the Spanish inquisition. A copy without t.-p., containing p. 1-668, is described in the Bibliotheca grenvilliana, p. 484. Another copy, in the same incomplete condition, quoted by Quaritch under no 61 of his Rough list no. 24, is now in the possession of H. Cordier. The 3d vol. was never published. cf. Cordier, Bibliotheca sinica, 2d ed., Paris, 1904; and Medina, Bibl. hisp. americana.)
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Copy of original in possession of Paul K. Benedict, M.D.
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Issued under the direction of João Pedro da Costa, to whom the author gave the manuscript. The death of the editor in 1857 left the work incomplete, the manuscripts passing into the possession of the editorś son. The part still inedited, including twelve or thirteen poets, embraces the Latin and French school, according to the division adopted by the author, the treatment of the Spanish and Italian troubadours thus being complete in the part published. cf. Silva. Dict. bibl. portuguez, v. 5, p. 28.
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"The discourses relate, each of them, to subjects common to the law of England and of Scotland."--Pref.
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The following activities are considered ineligible. 1. Construction of buildings, or portions thereof, used predominantly for general conduct of government (e.g. city halls, courthouses, jails, police stations, etc.) 2. General government expenses. 3. Costs of operating and maintaining public facilities and services (e.g. mowing parks and replacing street light bulbs). 4. Servicing or refinancing existing debt.
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The following activities are considered ineligible. 1. Construction of buildings, or portions thereof, used predominantly for general conduct of government (e.g. city halls, courthouses, jails, police stations, etc.) 2. General government expenses. 3. Costs of operating and maintaining public facilities and services (e.g. mowing parks and replacing street light bulbs). 4. Servicing or refinancing existing debt.
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"Prólogo" signed: Samuel A. Lafone Quevedo.--Enrique Pena.
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The hope of happiness.--Poverty and riches.--The possession of others.--On discovering the world.--THe lyrics of life.--Sorrow and renunciation.--The shelter of life.--The choice of the graces.--Apostleship.--On the reign of the heart.
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Thirty-two mysteries, supposed to have been acted at Wakefield; printed from a manuscript formerly in the possession of the Towneley family; edited by James Raine, compared with manuscript by Joseph Stevenson. cf. Dict. nat. biog. and pref. (p. xviii) cf. also Lowndes, Bibliographer's manuel.
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Also published from the original (?) manuscript (formerly in the possession of José Freire Monterroyo Mascarenhas) in the Revista litteraria of Porto, 1842, Vol. IX, p. 433-467. cf. Silva, v. I, p. 67.
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A pamphlet, suppressed by the censor, reproduced in facsimile (t.-p., [3]-16 p.) from the copy now in possession of the editor. On the t.-p of that copy is a ms. note apparently written by the author himself: "Niemals erschienen: ein zweites Exemplar ist nur in den HaÌnden des FuÌrsten Metternich vorhanden." The KoÌnigliche Bibliothek in Berlin, however, and the UniversitaÌtsbibliothek in Leipzig each possess a copy, one of which may be Metternich's copy. The pamphlet, beginning with a quotation from Goethe's letters from Italy on St. Philipp of Neri, is a discussion of the reformation from the Catholic point of view. cf. Nachwort, p. [17]-23.
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Publisher's plate no.: 37.
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On spine: Possession and other one-act plays.
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Mode of access: Internet.