See also:GREEN, See also:MATTHEW (1696-1737) , See also:English poet, was See also:born of See also:Nonconformist parents. He had a See also:post in the See also:custom See also:house, and the few anecdotes that have been preserved of him show him to have been as witty as his poems would See also:lead one to expect. He died unmarried at his lodging in Nag's See also:Head See also:Court, See also:- GRACE (Fr. grace, Lat. gratia, from grates, beloved, pleasing; formed from the root cra-, Gr. xav-, cf. xaipw, x6p,ua, Xapts)
- GRACE, WILLIAM GILBERT (1848– )
Grace-See also:- CHURCH
- CHURCH (according to most authorities derived from the Gr. Kvpcaxov [&wµa], " the Lord's [house]," and common to many Teutonic, Slavonic and other languages under various forms—Scottish kirk, Ger. Kirche, Swed. kirka, Dan. kirke, Russ. tserkov, Buig. cerk
- CHURCH, FREDERICK EDWIN (1826-1900)
- CHURCH, GEORGE EARL (1835–1910)
- CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815–189o)
- CHURCH, SIR RICHARD (1784–1873)
church See also:Street, in 1737. His Grotto, a poem on See also:Queen See also:Caroline's grotto at See also:Richmond, was printed in 1732; and his See also:chief poem, The See also:Spleen, in 1737 with a See also:preface by his friend See also:Richard See also:Glover. These and some other See also:short poems were printed in See also:Dodsley's collection (1748), and subsequently in various See also:editions of the See also:British poets. They were edited in 1796 with a preface by Dr See also:Aikin and in 1883 by R. E. A. Willmott with the poems of See also:- GRAY
- GRAY (or GREY), WALTER DE (d. 1255)
- GRAY, ASA (1810-1888)
- GRAY, DAVID (1838-1861)
- GRAY, ELISHA (1835-1901)
- GRAY, HENRY PETERS (1819-18/7)
- GRAY, HORACE (1828–1902)
- GRAY, JOHN DE (d. 1214)
- GRAY, JOHN EDWARD (1800–1875)
- GRAY, PATRICK GRAY, 6TH BARON (d. 1612)
- GRAY, ROBERT (1809-1872)
- GRAY, SIR THOMAS (d. c. 1369)
- GRAY, THOMAS (1716-1771)
Gray and others. The Spleen is an See also:epistle to Mr See also:Cuthbert See also:Jackson,
The funds thus acquired were, to a large extent, expended in making public improvements. A clause inserted in all deeds forbade the See also:sale of intoxicating liquors on the See also:land concerned, under See also:pain of the reversion of such See also:property to the See also:colony. The See also:initiation fees ($5) were used for the expenses of locating the colony, and the membership certificate fees ($15o) were expended in the construction of irrigating ditches, as was the See also:money received from the sale of See also:town lots, except about $13,000 invested in a school See also:building (now the Meeker Building). See also:Greeley was organized as a town in 1871, and was chartered as a See also:city of the second class in 1886. The "See also:Union Colony of See also:Colorado" still exists as an incorporated See also:body and holds reversionary rights in streets, alleys and public grounds, and in all places " where intoxicating liquors are manufactured, sold or given away, as a beverage."
See Richard T. See also:Ely, " A Study of a ' Decreed ' Town," Harper's See also:Magazine, vol. 1o6 (1902—1903), p. 390 sqq.
End of Article: GREEN, MATTHEW (1696-1737)
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