Historical and Statistical Account of Dunfermline, Volume 2W. Blackwood and sons, 1859 - Dunfermline (Scotland) |
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Page 77
... engine purposes . The seam is wrought on the stoop - and - room principle . There is a high- Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth , pp . 250-254 . By the Rev. William Arnot , Author of The Race for Riches . 1857 . pressure steam - engine ...
... engine purposes . The seam is wrought on the stoop - and - room principle . There is a high- Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth , pp . 250-254 . By the Rev. William Arnot , Author of The Race for Riches . 1857 . pressure steam - engine ...
Page 78
... engine of fifteen horse - power . There are two seams , the four and five feet work- ing , which are both wrought on the long - wall system . The Balmule pit is seventy - five fathoms to the four - feet coal . The coals are brought to ...
... engine of fifteen horse - power . There are two seams , the four and five feet work- ing , which are both wrought on the long - wall system . The Balmule pit is seventy - five fathoms to the four - feet coal . The coals are brought to ...
Page 79
... Engine . London : The Religious Tract Society . ) Hugo Reid thus well remarks on the use of the term horse - power : " In speaking of the power or force which an engine exerts , it is necessary to have some measure of force , or ...
... Engine . London : The Religious Tract Society . ) Hugo Reid thus well remarks on the use of the term horse - power : " In speaking of the power or force which an engine exerts , it is necessary to have some measure of force , or ...
Page 86
... Engine Pit . The splint coal was long ago exhausted , but there is a large extent of five - feet yet to work . The shaft at present serves as a ventilating upcast shaft for the Leadside and Waterloo workings , the mouth being entirely ...
... Engine Pit . The splint coal was long ago exhausted , but there is a large extent of five - feet yet to work . The shaft at present serves as a ventilating upcast shaft for the Leadside and Waterloo workings , the mouth being entirely ...
Page 87
... - ing ; and for this purpose it is almost entirely used by brewers and distillers . It is not so well adapted for locomotive engines and foundries , not being heavy enough , or not having TOWN AND PARISH OF DUNFERMLINE . 87.
... - ing ; and for this purpose it is almost entirely used by brewers and distillers . It is not so well adapted for locomotive engines and foundries , not being heavy enough , or not having TOWN AND PARISH OF DUNFERMLINE . 87.
Contents
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey Abbot of Dunfermline afterwards Alexander ancient appears arches Balmule bishop borough Bruce burgesses burgh called castle cathedral century chapel charter church civitas coal colliery Culdees David died Domesday Dunferm Dunfermline Abbey Durham early east ecclesiastical Edinburgh Edward England English erected fathoms feet fermline Fife Fifeshire five-feet Glasgow granted Halbeath Henry horse-power inscription Inverkeithing James James VI John King King's lands late letters London Lord Malcolm Malcolm Canmore Malcolm III Manchester Margaret minister monastery monks Murray nave North Queensferry noticed Palace parish period Perth Pittencrieff portion present prior Queen Queensferry Railway reign Robert Roman Rosyth royal Saxon says Scotland Scots Scottish seal seam side splint coal St Andrews St Margaret's St Margaret's Hope Stirling stone coffin Street tion tower town triforium volume wall Wellwood William word
Popular passages
Page 407 - O whare will I get a skeely skipper, To sail this new ship of mine?' O up and spake an eldern knight, Sat at the King's right knee, 'Sir Patrick Spens is the best sailor That ever sailed the sea.
Page 63 - T^HE ROMAN WALL: an Historical, Topographical, and Descriptive Account •*• of the Barrier of the Lower Isthmus, extending from the Tyne to the Solway, deduced from numerous personal surveys.
Page 68 - The rich man's wealth is his strong city : the destruction of the poor is their poverty.
Page 264 - For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro ; and as He finds out His enemies here, to be avenged on them, so will He not spare them for whom he doth good, if by his lovingkindness they become not good.
Page 11 - Thetford is but a town, though incorporated, and once the seat of a bishop. Whether Westminster owes its designation to the circumstance that it had a bishop for a few years of the reign of Henry VIII., and in the reign of Edward VI., may be doubted. But there are, besides Thetford, many places which were once the seats of bishops, as Sherburn, and Dorchester in Oxfordshire, which are never called cities.
Page 264 - Wherefore it's sealed upon our hearts, that this, as all the rest, is from the Lord's goodness, and not from man. I hope it becometh me to pray, That we may walk humbly and self-denyingly before the Lord, and believingly also. That you whom we serve, as the Authority over us, may do the work committed to you, with uprightness and faithfulness, — and thoroughly, as to the Lord.
Page 15 - William the King friendly salutes William the Bishop and Godfrey the portreve, and all the burgesses within London, both French and English. And I declare that I grant you to be all law-worthy as you were in the days of King Edward ; and I grant that every child shall be his father's heir, after his father's days ; and I will not suffer any person to do you wrong. God keep you.
Page 394 - With him nae pleading might prevail ; Brave Hardyknute to gain With fairest words, and reason strong, Strave courteously in vain.
Page 9 - ... particularly Milan, which stood at their head, had acquired a high degree of wealth and power, and had formed themselves into a confederation. The struggles between the emperors and these cities form one of the most important portions of the history of the German empire and of Italy.
Page 64 - the poor people, who in rags begged at the churches, receive for alms pieces of stone, with which they •went away contented. This species of stone (says he), whether with sulphur, or whatever inflammable substance it may be impregnated, they burn in place of wood, of which their country is destitute.