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t shall Mohammed's banner ever float On Salem's ruins? Shaft her sacred dust Where Christ has shed His blood, by infidels Be ever trodden down? Shall her temple Prostrate lie, to cause the impious mock Of Mussulmen for ever? It may not be. Ere many years wane in eternity, That banner shall be plucked from its proud height-- Those tow'ring minarets shall fall to earth And God again be worshipp'd thro' the land. David's fair city shall be then rebuilt; Her pristine beauty shall be far surpassed By more than mortal splendour; her temple Point high its turrets to the skies--and He, The God of Hosts with glory fill the place! S.J. * * * * * PARLIAMENTS, ANCIENT AND MODERN. _(For the Mirror.)_ Chamberlayne in his _Notitia Angliae_, says, "Before the conquest, the great council of the king, consisting only of the great men of the kingdom, was called _Magnatum Conventus_, or else _Praelatorum Procerumque Concilium_, and by the Saxons in their own tongue _Micel Gemote_,[3] the great assembly; after the conquest about the beginning of King Edward I., some say in the time of Henry I., it was called by the French word _Parlementum_, from _Parler_, to talk together; still consisting (as divers authors affirm) only of the great men of the nation, until the reign of Henry III. when the commons also were called to sit in parliament; for divers authors presume to say, the first writs to be found in records, sent forth to them, bear date 49 Henry III. Yet some antiquaries are of opinion, that long before, nothing of moment wherein the lives or estates of the common people of England were concerned, ever passed without their consent." [3] Or Wittenagemote, i.e. assembly of wise men. In Edward the Third's time, an act of parliament, made in the reign of William the Conqueror, was pleaded in the case of the Abbey of St. Edmund's Bury, and judicially allowed by the court. Hence it appears that parliaments or general councils are coeval with the kingdom itself. Sir Walter Raleigh thinks the Commons were first called on the 17th of Henry I. _Parliamentum de la Blande_, was a denomination to a parliament in Edward the Second's time, whereto the barons came armed against the two Spencers, with coloured bands on their sleeves for distinction. _Parliamentum Insanum_, was a parliament held at Oxford, anno 41 Henry III. so called, because the lords came w
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