The Seven Curses of LondonFields, Osgood, & Company, 1869 - 336 strani |
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
adopted advertising amongst amount appear baby baby-farmer bedgown beer beggar begging betting Bill Bit Alley Blackfriars Bridge bliged bread child City of London cocculus indicus convicted Covent Garden creature crime criminal curse desperate discovered door doubt drink drunkenness employed evil eyes fact gentleman girl guardians gutter habits hands honest human hundred infant intoxicating labor lady large number Leicester Square license-holders liquor live London Lord Lord Shaftesbury magistrate male matter means Metropolitan Police district mild beer mind months mother music-hall nature neglected children never newspaper night offences once Oxleek parish pauper penny perhaps persons police pounds present prison prostitutes public-house question ragged reader regards relief shillings society sort Street sure teetotal thief thieves thing thousand tickets tion trade vagrants week Wilfred Lawson woman women workhouse wretched young
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 282 - Dont waste your time at family funerals grieving for your relatives: attend to life, not to death: there are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it, and better.
Stran 219 - District, and for all Persons whom he shall call to his Assistance, to take into Custody, without a Warrant, any Person who within View of any such Constable shall offend in any Manner against this Act, and whose Name and Residence shall be unknown to such Constable, and cannot be ascertained by such Constable.
Stran 218 - Commissioners of Police shall have made for regulating the route of horses, carts, carriages, and persons during the time of Divine Service, and for preventing obstructions during public processions, and on other occasions hereinbefore specified, shall wilfully disregard or not conform himself thereunto : 10. Every person who, without the consent of the owner or occupier, shall affix any posting bill or other paper against or upon...
Stran 218 - Every person who shall use any threatening, abusive, or insulting words or behaviour with intent to provoke a breach of the peace, or whereby a breach of the peace may be occasioned : 14.
Stran 150 - ... and that of 1531 was revived. In 1551 an act was passed which directed that a book should be kept in every parish, containing the names of the householders and of the impotent poor; that collectors of alms should be appointed who should "gently ask every man and woman what they of their charity will give weekly to the relief of the poor.
Stran 13 - I find that it is not only deficient in the due proportion of oxygen, but it contains three times the usual amount of carbonic acid, besides a quantity of aqueous vapour charged with alkaline matter that stinks abominably.
Stran 151 - Living by ; and also to raise weekly or otherwise (by Taxation of every Inhabitant, Parson, Vicar, and other, and of every Occupier of Lands, Houses, Tithes Impropriate, Propriations of Tithes, Coal Mines or saleable Underwoods in the said Parish...
Stran 224 - There is no fear of his missing it ; no chance of his fixing on a wrong night. It is always the same at the music-hall. Its meat is other men's poison; and it can fatten and prosper while honesty starves. The bane and curse of society is its main support ; and to introduce the purging besom would be to ruin the business. At the same time, I would wish it to be distinctly understood, that I do not desire to convey to the reader the impression that the numerical majority of musichall frequenters are...
Stran 218 - Every common prostitute or nightwalker loitering or being in any thoroughfare or public place for the purpose of prostitution or solicitation, to the annoyance of the inhabitants or passers-by,
Stran 313 - Where the husband of any woman is beyond the seas, or in custody of the law, or in confinement in a licensed house or asylum as a lunatic or idiot, all relief which the Guardians shall give to his wife, or her child or children, shall be given to such woman, in the same manner and subject to the same conditions, as if she were a widow.