Page images
PDF
EPUB

Coals were first used in London in the reign of Edward I. and the smoke was supposed to corrupt the air so much, that he forbad the use of them by proclamation.-Stowe's London.

MONUMENT TO KEMBLE. We hear that the design, selected for the Monument of John Kemble is the exhibition of that eminent tragedian, seated in the character of Cate-a figure at once suitable to an adequate representation both of the actor and the man.

THEOLOGICAL ARGUMENT.-You have heard of a certain orthodox Bishop, who, in order to convince an Emperor of consubstantiality, chucked the Son of the Emperor under the chin, and pulled his nose, in the presence of his Sacred Majesty! The Emperor was about to throw the Bishop out of the window, when the good man addressed to him this very pleasant and convincing speech :-" Sire, if your Majesty is so angry at my failure in respect to your son, how do you think God will treat those who refuse to Jesus Christ the titles which are due to him?"-The people of whom I speak (the Unitarians) say, that the holy Bishop was very ill advised; that his argument was any thing but conclusive; and that the Emperor should have replied to him: "Learn that there are two modes of failing in proper respect: the first is, to be wanting in honour to my son; and the second, to pay him the homage which is due to me."Voltaire's Philosophical Dictionary.

THE ELEPHANT. While breakfast was getting ready, I amused myself with looking at a baggage elephant, and a few camels which were in the act of loading. The intelligent obedience of the elephant is well known; but to look upon this huge and powerful monster kneeling down at the mere bidding of the human voice, and, when he has risen again, to see him protrude his trunk for the foot of his mahout or attendant, to help him into his seat; or, bending the joint of his hind leg, make a step for him to climb up behind; and then, if any loose cloths or cards fall off, with a dog like docility, pick them up with his probocis and put them up again; will delight and surprise long after it ceases to be novel. When loaded, this creature broke off a large branch from the lofty tree near which he stood, and quietly fanned and fly-flapped himself with all the nonchalance of an indolent woman of fashion, till the camels were ready-Sketches of India.

WHALE FISHERY-The whales taken in the South Seas are called the whalebone or black whales. The spermaceti, generally called the sperm whales, have no whalebone, but are provided with large teeth. The brain of this fish, and the sediment of the oil, are made into what is called spermaceti. A black southern whale produces from about 5 to 8 tuns of oil; a sperm whale ranges from 3 to 13 tuns.

COTTON FACTORIES.-As we copied from Cobbett's Register, some weeks ago, a statement respecting the temperature in these places, and the alleged oppressive rules enforced against the work people, we think it onr duty to notice a very calm and sensible article on the subject in the Manchester Guardian, a paper of talent and principle, which has deservedly attained, in a very short space of time, a wide circulation and general respect. The Editor gives a summary of the evidence taken before Parliamentary Committees in 1816 and 1818, from which it appears, by the testimony of eminent medical men who had made personal observation, that the average temperature in the factories does not exceed 70 degreesor, taking those in which the finest yarns are spun, which require more heat, it does not reach 74. [The statement, or rather anonymous advertisement, quoted by Mr. Cobbett, represented the heat in one factory, as a sample of all, to be from 80 to 84 degrees.] The Editor adds the detailed result of his own visits to a number of spinning establishments, which agrees generally with the statements of the medical witnesses. The Editor farther denies that the work people are locked in the rooms, or prevented from sending out for water. He states also, that the entire management of the windows in the spinning-rooms is left to the work people, who may consequently let in as much air as can be admitted without injury to their work." In several of the mills, also, there are funnels or chimneys, with eyes into the upper part of each room, to carry off the heated air, whilst the constant opening of the doors in the necessary passing and repassing of the bands from room to room on business, furnishes, even when the windows are closed, a considerable supply of fresh air. That the hands are not crowded unwholesomely together, will be evident, when it is stated that there are nearly twelve feet square and ten feet high allotted to each individual."-[On this important subject, we have received a letter in defence of Mr. Cobbett's Statements, which we shall give in our next.]

ELOPEMENT-The neighbourhood of Bryanston-square has recently been thrown into some surprise by a Mr. and Mrs. C. The latter, a short time since, kept a female seminary at Kensington. A gentleman of the name of S. had gained such an ascendancy in Mrs. C.'s good opinion, that it was reported that a criminal intercourse was the consequence. Mr. C. endeavoured to discover the truth; but nothing but common civilities could be observed. On Tuesday week Mrs. C. disappeared, leaving her hasband and an infant ten months old. On the following day, Mr. S. informed Mr. C. that his father was dangerously ill at Norwich, and that his presence was wanted. Mr. S. left the house. This excited suspicion Every enquiry was continued; but no tidings could be obtained until a few days since, when Mrs. C. was discovered residing with Mr. S. as man and wife, in the vicinity of Tottenham, Mr. C. is about forty-five years of age, and the lady near thirty, and daughter to a corn-factor in the city. At the time of her elopement she took with her about 70%. and the whole of her wardrobe. Mr. S. has scarcely seen twenty years, and its connections are the most respectable at Norwich.-Herald,

TREATMENT OF IRELAND.-England seems to have treated Ireland much in the same way as Mrs. Brownrigg treated her apprentice; for which Mrs. Brownrigg is hanged in the first volume of the Newgate Calendar. Upon the whole, we think the apprentice is better off than the Irishman ; as Mrs. Brownrigg merely starves and beats her, without any attempt to prohibit her from going to any shop, or praying at any church, apprentice might select; and once or twice, if we remember rightly, Brownrigg appears to have felt some compassion. Not so old England-who indulges rather in a steady baseness, uniform brutality, and unrelenting oppression.Edinburgh Review.

THE REFORMATION.-Mr. Cobbett is publishing, in threepenny numbers, a "History of the Reformation." He takes, as usual, a strong partisan view of that eventful era, and leaves out of the account much of the evil got rid of, and the impulse given to mental freedom; but his History is nevertheless a very well-written and amusing one; and considering the gross prejudice and misinformation existing in regard to both the Catholic Church and its holy successor, we have no doubt it will do great good, and open the eyes of thousands who have been taught to consider the original church all corruption, and its supplanter all purity! Mr. Cobbett, as may be supposed, is particularly emphatic and pleasant upon the motives and means of the Protestant priesthood, in wresting from the Scarlet Lady those abominations in which they forthwith clothed Catholic Chapels in England, 71 Charity and other Schools, and 348 It appears from an official statement just published, that there are 256 officiating Priests: of these 12 chapels, one school, and eight priests, are in the county of Hants; six chapels and five priests in Sussex; three chapels and two priests in Wiltshire; six chapels and six priests in Devonshire; seven chapels, one school, and eight priests in Dorsetshire. In Lancashire there appears to be the largest number, there being 81 chapels, six schools, and 79 priests.

themselves.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

WINTER ASSIZES.

KINGSTON, DEC. 31.-Wm. Dewhirst was tried for the wilful murder of his infant child, by striking her against the wall. Our readers are well acquainted with this painful case, from the details we gave at the time; and the Jury, after ample evidence, acquitted the unhappy man on the ground of insanity. He was in a most desponding state during the whole of the trial.

George Gregory was then tried for the murder of his father, by stabbing him with a knife. It appeared from the evidence, that the father

struck the prisoner violently, when he was going to cut his brother some bread and butter; and that the youth, forgetting that he had a knife in years of age, with whom the deceased had lived since he and his wife examined was Miss Smith, a young lady of elegant deportment, about 25 his hand, made a blow at his father, by which he was fatally wounded.-parted on the 29th September. She said, "On Tuesday, after breakfast, Not Guilty.

ACCIDENTS, OFFENCES, &c.

CRIMES IN FRANCE.-Several atrocious deeds have recently been committed in France. Caroline Caudron, a girl in the service of the elder Ringard, a farmer at Fontaine-sur-Mayne, being pregnant by his son, was found dead in a field, with 22 wounds upon her mutilated body. Both father and son have been found guilty of the murder, and sentenced to death. At Troyes, a young man named Cartille was murdered by one Sire-Jeane, a bottle-seller, who was his rival in the love of a young female. The girl having shown a preference to Cartille, it so operated on Sire-Jean, that he stabbed the youth in the back to the heart with a bayonet, who of course died on the spot. On the night of the 29th Sept. Alexander Prax and Bernard Jourdia, two young men under 22 years of age, residing at Belesta, got into the bed-room of Madeleine Sanegre, while her brothers were from home. The young person, who was 21 years of age, and remarkable for her personal attractions, was asleep; they stripped off their clothes, and placed themselves by her side. Madeleine, suddenly awaking, was on the point of seizing the bell, when she was prevented by the threats of the young men, and who swore they would murder her if she made the least disturbance. They soon intimated their horrible intentions

It was only at the expiration of two hours, that the girl recovered her liberty. She instantly fled to a brother, to whom she related her misfortune, exclaiming with all the vehemence of grief-"I am lost for ever! What will become of the wretched Madeleine! Alexander and Bernard have caused my ruin!" and the interesting, unfortunate creature, overcome with the intenseness of her feelings, fell senseless into the arms of her brother. On the following morning Bernard Jourdia was arrested, but the other found means to escape. Proceedings commenced against Jourdia; he was tried, found guilty, and condemned to hard labour for life, and to be branded.-At Cascagny, Francoise Adelaide Planchon, aged 21, was found guilty of the murder of her infant. She had been seduced and abandoned by her seducer, who married another woman. Driven to distraction, she repaired to the nurse who had the care of the infant, and told her that she wished to take it to her uncle. This occurred the very day that the nuptial ceremony between her lover and her friend had taken place. She purchased a small quantity of copperas, one half of which she swallowed, and the remainder she gave to her child. The poison did not take effect on the mother, but it proved fatal to the infant: it expired in convulsions. The unfortunate Francoise did not attempt to conceal the fact, but regretted that she did not die with her infant. She had a most interesting appearance, and many persons shed tears during the trial. When sentence of death was passed, she remained unmoved, and leaving the bar, she exclaimed," Thank God, my troubles will soon be at an end-I shall meet my infant in another world!" Everybody laments the untimely fate of the unfortunate Francoise.

NEAPOLITAN MURDERS.-Extract of a letter from Naples, dated Dec. 6: -"A very unfortunate occurrence took place near Pæstum three days ago. The fine weather had attracted several English parties to view the ruins, situate, as you know, in a marsh which pestilential exhalations render barely habitable. The few inhabitants are not much removed from savages. A lady, with her two daughters, on returning, were stopped and robbed by three men with their faces masked. This lady's carriage was followed by that of Mr. Hunt, late High Sheriff of Northamptonshire, who was accompanied by his lady. They were stopped by the same party. On demanding his money, Mr. Hunt gave them a purse, containing four dollars and a few carlins, declaring that he carried no more money about with him. They replied 'We know you have more, and if you do not surrender it, you must die.' Mr. Hunt rejoined, 'You dare not shoot at this time of day.' He had scarcely uttered this observation when a shot was fired, and a ball entered his left breast, passing out at the right side; another ball struck Mrs. Hunt in the left breast, and passed through the lungs. The foremost robber instantly turned round, crying, Who fired that shot?' and the three immediately ran off without searching for plunder. Some officers of the Revenge were within hearing, who conveyed them to the miserable place called an inn at Pæstum, where Mr. Hunt expired almost immediately, expressing his regret at having refused his money. Mrs. Hunt recovered in a slight degree, but only lingered till yesterday, when she expired. Mr. Hunt was an only child; he was in possession of large property, and had only been married seven months. This event has caused a great sensation among the English here: a number of Gendarmes were immediately sent from Naples to search for the perpetrators of this crime, but such a police as exists here is not likely to discover them."

DEATH OF MR. SNOWBALL,-An inquest was on Wednesday held at Kensington, on the body of Edward Snowball, Esq. of Kensington-Gore, aged 54, who died on Tuesday in consequence of having taken a quantity of arsenic. Mr. Auterac, surgeon, said he was called in to the deceased, who was lying on the bed very ill. He first denied that he had taken poison, but afterwards confessed it, and said that family embarrassments had induced him to commit the act. Mr. Auterac added, that about a fortnight before, Mr. Snowball, attempted to poison himself, but he was then saved by some strong medicines on the present occasion, the antidotes all failed; he died about six in the evening.-Among other persons

Mr. Snowball went out: finding that he did not return to dinner, I became alarmed, knowing what had happened before, and went to Mr. Gould's (the Camden Arms Tavern) and found Mr. Snowball there. He seemed dreadfully agitated, and was almost unable to walk. When I got home I put him to bed, and to satisfy my suspicion, I felt his pockets, and found a parcel of arsenic, and a razor recently set. I pressed him to tell me if he had taken the poison, and he at last confessed he had; and I instantly despatched a messenger for Dr. Auterac, much against his inclination. I am no relation to the deceased, nor was I his servant; he was my friend. I was induced to go into the house at his solicitation. The day I entered the house, the deceased made over all his property to me by will.-Juror: Do you mean to say, that you cohabited with him as his wife?-Miss Smith held down her head, and said, she was not bound to answer that question, and burst into tears. Another Juror: The deceased left a letter for you, Miss Smith; have you got it?-Miss Smith drew it from her bosom :-the following is an extract from it:-"My Dear Charlotte,-Since my wife, Mrs. Snowball, has left me, which was on the 29th September last, I have experienced from her two brothers, Mr. John Tweedy, banker at York, and Captain George Tweedy, lately returned from Bombay, the most inveterate and malicious persecution possible, so much so as to occasion the fatal deed I am going to be guilty of." The remainder of the letter went on to state what sums he owed, and was owing to him, and concluded by wishing that the letter would go forth to the world by means of the public papers.-The Coroner was of opinion that deceased was sane when he committed the act; but the Jury, after an hour's deliberation, returned the following verdict:" That the deceased, Edward Snowball, Esq. came to his death by taking a quantity of arsenic, being at the time of unsound mind."

MURDER NEAR WOLVERHAMPTON.-On Wednesday week, a diabolical murder was perpetrated at a cottage called the Gorse-house, on the road to Cannock, upon Ann Spencer, a poor and aged woman, the wife of Edward Spencer, a labourer, the circumstances of which are as follow:About three o'clock, one of Colonel Grabam's servants called at the cottage with a peck of malt; the door being open, he went in, and upon the kitchen floor perceived some blood, which excited his alarm; be proceeded up stairs, where the dreadful spectacle presented itself of the murdered body of the poor old creature, still warm, lying on the chamber floor, her long hair being turned over her face so as to cover it; her head was dreadfully mangled, and there was a violent wound under her right ear, and a severe bruise upon the back of her hand, which she must have received in endeavouring to ward off the blows of her inhuman murderer, which are supposed to have been inflicted with a hammer, or some heavy instrument. There is little doubt but the horrid deed was committed in the kitchen (a considerable quantity of blood being smeared about the floor), and the body afterwards dragged into the chamber above. The door had been forced open, and the house stripped of several articles of wearing apparel.-Two persons have been taken into custody, suspected of being the murderers.

MARRIAGES.

rington, to Lady Katherine Charteris, third daughter of the Earl of Wemyss and March.
On the 20th ult. at Gosford, Lord Grey, eldest son of the Earl of Stamford and War.
At Gibside Chapel, on the 21st ult. John Davidson, Esq. of West Otterburn, Nor.
thumberland, to Miss Susan H. E. Jessup, youngest daughter of Lady Anna Maria
Jessup, of Bird-hill House, Durham.
Sullivan, Bart,
Ou the 28th ult. William Hale, jun. Esq. to Charlotte, daughter of the late Sir R. J
On the 29th ult. Lewis Crombie, Esq. of Argyll-street, to Harriett, daughter of Thomas
Lester, Esq. of Crooms-hill, Greenwich.

daughter of Thomas Freak, Esq. of Blackheath.
On the 24th ult. John Cutler, Esq. of the Ordnance Department, Tower, to Louisa,

On the 18th ult. at Loughton, F. Field, Esq. of Addle-street, Aldermanbury, to Catherine Morgan, uiece of the late James Birt. Esq. of Loughton, Essex.

On Wednesday, at St. George's, Bloomsbury, Mr. William Tarn, of Milk-street, to
Flora, youngest daughter of the late Lieutenant Colonel Wyndham, of the Guards.
of Albemarle-street.
On Thursday, Mr. Prosser, of Porthamell, Breconshire, to Miss Eliza Rachel Guater

DEATHS.

On the 25th ult. at Brighton, in his 80th year, the Right Hon. Lord Eardley. At Leith, on the 19th ult. aged 75, Charles Smith, Esq. portrait-painter. On the 17th ult. Brevet Lieut.-Colonel Samuel Willianis, aged 58 years, of the Ports mouth Division of Royal Marines. This lamented Officer (says a Correspondent) had Captain only in his own corps.-Such neglect to services, worth, and merit, is not to be spent 42 years in faithful, honourable, and active service, and he died with the rank of found in any service under the sun, with the exception of the Royal Marines.-By this death, Lieut. Campbell, of the Chatham division, is promoted to the rank of a First Lieutenant, and placed upon the half-pay list of this much-neglected corps: he has served the unprecedented length of very nearly 17 years as a Second Lieutenantwhich is the same as Ensign.

On Sunday, at Chubhall, near Ross, in his 92d year, James Morgan, one of the Society

of Friends.

On the 26th ult. at Tottenham, aged 85, Mr. James Saner.

On the 1st of November last, at Essequibo, in the 20th year of his age, Walter Robert
D'Urban, youngest son of Sir Benjamin D'Urban, Lieutenant-Governor of that colony.
Lately, in the 78th year of his age, John Holland, Esq. many years Freight Account-
ant to the East India Company.

sistant Commissary-General in the Burmese war.
On the 30th of June, at Rangoon, of the cholera, Captain Alexander Cumming, As-

On the 27th ult. in the 18th year of his age, Mr. Henry Bowdon, son of the late
James S. Bowden, Esq. of Hull.

Kingston, Jamaica.
On the 13th ult. at Brighton, John Burke, Esq. of York-place, London, formerly of

Mr. Lewin, Solicitor, on Monday returned to Cheltenham, and visited a professional
acquaintance, at whose house he slept that night, and dined with him on Tuesday, ap
parently in good health: but in half an hour afterwards, he was seized with a fit of
apoplexy, and expired before medical assistance arrived,
affectionate wife and mother.
Lately, near Stoke, Staffordshire, in her 39th year, Mrs. Mary Emery, a faithful and

[ocr errors]

LORD BYRON.*
(From the New Monthly Magazine.)

It is well known that a series of letters were preserved, written by Lord Byron in the fulness of affection to his mother, replete with traits of feeling and of action, and well calculated to free the writer from some portion of the thousand-and-one calumnies which have been heaped upon his head; and that these letters, by the operation of an injunction sued from the Court of Chancery, his friends-suppressed! Another friend, admitted into his palace at Pisa, took advantage of the opportunity to journalize his daily conversations, to give permanence to every idle word, the product of fun, fancy, or spleen, and to fix for ever those transient vapours of the mind, from which the best are not exempt, and which the wisest cannot always control; and this assemblage of the "dicenda tacendaque" the gentleman in question has published as an offering of friendship to the manes of the poet! But last and not least, Lord Byron gave the profits of some of his most popular works to another friend; and this friend publishes a book to insinuate that, if his noble patron attained to literary eminence," it was he taught the boy to read," it was he who pruned and petted him into excellence; while the son of this friend (we have often heard of the odium theologicum, but never till now knew what was the mens grata theologica) in remembrance of the benefits conferred on the father, adds a supplement to declare that Lord Byron was a child of perdition; and coolly consigns him, body and soul for ever, in fee-simple to the

!!!

[ocr errors]

his matter happens to enquire. He is always, therefore, graceful and elegant; and though his letters will appear to be just such as any body would write, they are in reality such as very few persons indeed could produce. Somebody has said, "If I had more time, I should have written more briefly," Lord Byron required no time for this species of correction; for his letters, flowing from a full heart and a clear head, are totally exempt from that pedantic research which is the occasion of tediousness and diffusion. At the period when this correspondence was committed to paper, Lord Byron had not arrived at his unenviable pre-eminence. It is a singular coincidence, that the youthful portraits of Voltaire exhibit the same playfulness, and have nothing of the sarcastic diablerie of expression, which, in the later representations of that wonderful man, imply at least as much malice as wit. To his mother, Lord Byron is tender, affectionate, and respectful. His anxiety for those immediately dependent upon him is evinced in frequent traits of sympathy, such as are little to be expected from the school of aristocratic hauteur and cold reserve in which he was reared. His references to his servants are frequent. Speaking of one of his suite whom he had sent home, he says, "Pray show the boy any kindness, as he is my favourite."- Say this to his father, who may else imagine he has behaved ill." In another letter he returns to the same subject: "Pray take care of my boy Robert, and the old man Murray; neither the youth of the one, nor the age of the other, would have sustained the fatigues of travelling. It is well they returned." Again he writes, "Tell Rushton his son is well, and doing well; so is Murray." He speaks of Murray's leaving him, with regret, as his age would in all probability prevent their ever meeting again. Of Robert also he says, he likes him, " because, like himself, he seemed a friendless animal." With respect to his behaviour to his mother, let the Correspondence speak. From this it appears, that he fitted up Newstead on the eve of his voyage, exclusively for her convenience; and that he had made arrangements, in the event of his death, to assure her a life-interest in the manor, and a sufficient income. In a letter from Constantinople, when his property was in great disorder, he begs of her, if she has occasion for a pecuniary supply, to use his funds as far as they go, without reserve; leaving it to her discretion, how much, in the then state of his affairs, she may think proper to require. In doing this, we are well aware that Lord Byron did no more than most men, placed in his circumstances, and at his time of life, would have done: for if age be the epoch of wisdom, youth is the season of generosity and of warm affections. We should, indeed, be ashamed for ourselves, and for human nature, in dragging such a trait before the public as illustrative of character, if party-spirit had not taken some share in degrading it. Lord Byron had his faults; he must have had great faults; for his place in society, his defective education, and the neglect to which he was abandoned in the trying hour of adolescence, favoured the developement of every weed; but these letters bespeak an affectionate and respectful son, a kind master, and a liberal friend, and such he was in his pecuniary relations with his companions.

With respect to the injunction regarding the present letters, the case is clearly mischievous. If any confidence be due to the narrative of Mr. Dallas (and it has the authority of a death-bed repentance) † the whole affair resolves itself into a matter of pounds, shillings, and pence; so that, while declamation was loudest against Lord Byron's reputation, a document has been withheld, which would place his character in one amiable point of view, for the valuable consideration of a disputed copyright!! The injunction, however, seems to have proved unsuccessful. Mr. Dallas had, it should seem, already put the letters out of his own control, before the matter came under the cognizance of the Lord Chancellor; and the subject of another state, over which the press-suppressing dogmas of our Courts of Equity have no influence, has caused them to be translated into French, and given to the press. Thus, by a bizarre combination of circumstances, the French nation are in possession of a document of which the English have been deprived; and we are indebted to the freedom of the French press for information on a truly material point which our own boasted liberties did not suffice to procure us. In noticing this highly interesting publication, we shall chiefly confine ourselves to his Lordship's correspondence with Mrs. Byron. His letters to Mr. Dallas, which constitute the other moiety of the volume, relate chiefly to the variations and corrections made during the progress of printing his English Bards, and Childe Harold; and will be a valuable present to the critic, to the inquirer concerning the phenomena of mind, and to the literary gossip: but Lord Byron's correspondence with his mother possesses, we confess, a high place in our esAs evidences of Lord Byron's state of mind, and of that timation. These letters were written during his Lordship's morbid feeling which formed the basis of his poetical chaabsence on his tour to the East, and contain numerous brief racter, these letters are highly valuable. They exhibit frebut sprightly sketches of those sites and scenes which he after-quent traces of that deep impression which his lonely destiny wards embodied in more lofty poetry. They are, in point of style, as far as that particular may be judged by a translation, eminently remarkable for the ease and simplicity which usually mark the epistolary effusions of men of genius. There is nothing in them affected, nothing strained; no laboured effort at wit, no pompous display of reflection, or of sentiment upon stilts. He writes merely because he has facts to relate, or feelings to communicate; and he is brief or extended, just as

• "Correspondance Inédite de Lord Byron," Paris,
+ Mr. Dallas died at Havre a few weeks since,

and narrowed fortunes had early made on his susceptible disposition. Disappointment and mortification had already done their work, a work which no after-flattery and success could undo, When Mr. Hobhouse left him, he describes himself as glad to be once more alone. He was sick of his companion-not that he was a bad one, but because his nature led him to solitude. He returns, he says, in another letter, to England with the same feelings which prevailed at his departure-indifference and apathy.

It had been circulated in private society, at the time of

[graphic]
[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][merged small][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][ocr errors][ocr errors]
« PreviousContinue »