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The Law of One Book V: Personal MaterialÐFragments Omitted from the First Four Books (Law of One)
Book Five of The Law of One is comprised of the 56 fragments of personal material that were originally omitted from the first four books of this series. Both Jim, the scribe, and Carla, the instrument for the Ra contact, have added their comments to these fragments to give the reader an idea of what it was like to be part of this contact and to show how every persons experience can be used for personal growth and service to others. A wide variety of topics is covered, from Eisenhowers meeting with extraterrestrials in 1954 to UFO/government conspiracies, Wanderers, sexual energy transfers, anger, balancing, Aleister Crowley, the Tunguska crater in Russia, pre-incarnative choices, psychic greetings, alternate and orthodox healing modalities, the ball lightning phenomenon, and the many facets of the spiritual journey in general..
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Omitted Chapters Of History Disclosed In The Life And Papers Of Edmund Randolph - Governor Of Virginia - First Attorney-General United States - Secretary Of State
CONTENTS. Page PREFACE . . . . . . . . . . . v Chapter I.-THE RANDOLPHS . . . . . . . I 11.- A CHILD O F THE REVOLUTIO N . . . 14 111.-IN WASHINGTONFASM ILY . . . . . 23 1V.-THE VIRGINICAO NVENTIO OF N 1776 . , . 28 TUTION . . . . . . . . 1 0 3 XII1.-THEINTERREGNUM . . . . . I I XIV.-LAUNCHING T HE CONSTITUTIO . N . . . I23 XV.-RES ANGUSTAM ILITI E . . . . . I32 XV1.-THE FIRSTA TTORNEY-GENER . A L . . I39 XVI1.-THE FOUNDIN O G F RELIGIOUFSR EEDOM . . 156 iv CONTENTS Chapter Page XXVII1.-REVELATIONS F RO I E NGLISHA RCHIVES . . 290 XX1X.-A SUSPENDEDSW ORD . . . . . . 305 XXX.- PR CIEUSECSO NFESSION . S . . , . . 311 XXX1.-THE OVERTURE S . . . , . . 317 XXXI1.-MR. WOLCOTT . . . . . . . 326 XXXII1.-COL. PICKERING . . . . . . . 335 XXX1V.-WASHINGTON I N JUDGMEN . T . . . . 346 XXXV.-GERMANICUS IN EXILE . . . , . . 358 XXXV1.-THE FICTITIOUDSE FAULT . . . . . 370 XXXVI1.-A LAST TRIBUTE T O WASHINGTON . . . 378 XXXVIII.-THE BRAVE HEART BROKEN . . . . 384 INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . 395 PREFACE. IN a room of the Virginia Historical Society there is a portrait so blurred that the face is repulsive. It is the alleged portrait of a man described by his contemporary, William Wirt, as of a figure large and portly his features uncommonly fine his dark eyes and his whole countenance lighted up with an expression of the most conciliatory sensibility his attitudes dignified and commanding his gesture graceful and easy his voice perfect harmony and his whole manner that of an accomplished and engaging gentleman. The portrait at Richmond, repudiated when painted, suffered all manner of ill usage and its fate resembles that of the man for whom its dauber meant it,-Edmund Randolph. Painted by partisanship as he was not, his name has been marred by every prejudice, and his fame left to his country in conventionalized disfigurement. The Centenary of our Constitution has already brought a gallery of fresh historical portraits of its leading framers, but one panel, like that of Falieri at Venice, is vacant there is no portraiture of the statesman to whom the initiation and ratification of the Constitution were especially due, except a blackened effigy hung up by enemies in a moment of partisan passion. This traditional effigy of Edmund Randolph I have examined by the light of facts and documents to which historians appear to have had no access, with growing conviction that the nation knows little of a very interesting figure of its early history. - The true portraiture, personal and political, might have been given in small compass but behind the vacant panel have been found facts and documents of wider scope. The more important of these have for many years been slumbering in families with Y vi PREFA CE. S which I have a certain intimacy. These suggested the probable existence of others, which I have sought in many States and cities, including those of Europe. The result has been an accumulation of unpublished material, the reduction of which to the dimension of this volume has been the hard part of my task. Of course the elucidation of these papers has required occasional citation of others already published. The historical student of our near future will, let us hope, be able to express gratitude to his government for the Bureau of Manuscripts, connected with its history, proposed by the Congressional Library Committee 1888. My own gratitude remembers the fact that our national negligence has some offset in the enterprise and liberality of our great private collectors....
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English Surnames in 1601 and 1602 : An Index Giving About 19,650 References to Surnames Contained in the Printed Registers of 778 English Parishes During the First Year of the XVIIth Century and An Index Giving About 20,500 References to Surnames Contained in the Printed Registers of 964 English Parishes During the Second Year of the XVIIth Century. With an Appendix Indexing the Surnames Contained in 186 Printed Registers During 1601 (Omitted from the Volume for that Year). 2 vols.
These two works, now reprinted for handy reference in a single volume, index over 40,000 references to surnames contained in the printed registers of English parishes during the years 1601 and 1602. While the two indexes themselves merely list the surname and the parish register(s) where it occurred in 1601 and 1602, and the location of the register at the time of original publication, researchers must realize that these reference are of considerable value inasmuch as the parish records to which they refer are nothing less than early 17th-century registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials. The potential importance of this combined work for American descendants of 17th-century English colonists, therefore, can scarcely be exaggerated. For a great many people, then, these references will tell from which parish in England an ancestor migrated, which parish records to examine, and what other branches of the family existed at that time. (Our publication commences with a prefatory List of Parishes Indexed, which serves as a key to the references to counties and parishes after each name in the index.).
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Omitted Chapters from Hotten's Original Lists of Persons of Quality ... And Others Who Went From Great Britain To The American Plantations, 1600-1700: ... Rolls from the Barbados Census of 1679/80
Hotten's Original Lists of Persons of Quality is the classic work on 17th-century British immigration to the colonies Not generally known, however, is that Hotten included only a portion of the lists available to him. Nearly two-thirds of the important Barbados Census of 1679/80 was not used and this left out more than half of the island's parish registers, all of the militia rolls, and various lists of landholders.

Thousands of immigrants settled on Barbados before planting new roots on the mainland and their records have gone undetected--until now, that is, for this work, based on records in the Public Record Office in London, supplies all of the material missing in Hotten. The parish registers give the names of all of those baptized or buried, with the dates and the names of the family members; the census returns list landowners' names with the number of freemen, servants, and slaves in the household; and the militia rolls list the militiamen by regiment and company, as well as the landowners responsible for furnishing troops. About 6,500 persons are named--their first mention in the records of the New World!.
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