[123] History of Maryland, vol. ii. p. 85.
[124] History of the United States, p. 252.
[125] Day-Star of American Freedom, p. 138.
[126] Rev. Ethan Allen says this continued until 1649, when Kent was erected into a county.—Maryland Toleration, p. 36.
[127] Day-Star of American Freedom, p. 143.
[128] Id. p. 160.
[129] The document at length, with the signatures, is given in numerous histories of Maryland, and will be found in Davis’s Day-Star of American Freedom, p. 71.
[130] Kent’s Commentaries on Am. Law, vol. ii. pp. 36, 37.
[131] Reprinted from advance sheets of The Prose Works of William Wordsworth. Edited, with preface, notes, and illustrations, by the Rev. Alex. B. Grosart; now for the first time published, by Moxon, Son & Co., London. These works will fill three volumes, embracing respectively the political and ethical, æsthetical and literary, critical and ethical, writings of the author, and, what will interest American readers especially, his Republican Defence.
[132] Afterwards Father Faber of the Oratory. His “Sir Launcelot” abounds in admirable descriptions.