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racter of the court corporation so called, i. 466. Knight-errantry, origin of it, vii. 390. Labor, necessary, why, i. 215. human labor called by the ancients _instrumentum vocale_, v. 140. that on which the farmer is most to rely for the repayment of his capital, v. 140. Laborer and employer, always an implied contract between them, v. 137. the first and fundamental interest of the laborer, what, v. 140. Laboring poor, impropriety of the expression, v. 135, 466. Lacedemonians, at the head of the aristocratic interests of Greece, iv. 321. La Fontaine, has not one original story, vii. 145. Lancaster, Duchy and County Palatine of, severed from the crown by Henry IV., ii. 296. Landed estate of the crown, remarks on it, ii. 299. Landed Interest, policy of the French Republic with regard to it, iv. 323. Landed property, the firm basis of every stable government, v. 491. Lanfranc, character of him, vii. 363. Langton, Stephen, his appointment to the see of Canterbury through the influence of the Pope, vii. 447, 451. oath administered by him to King John on his absolution, vii. 455. Law's Mississippi scheme, character of it, iii. 554. Law of neighborhood, what, v. 321. Law, remarks on the study of it, ii. 125. Laws, reach but a very little way, i. 470. their severity tempered by trial by jury, i. 499. superseded by occasions of public necessity, ii. 329. bad ones the worst sort of tyranny, ii. 395. laws and manners, a knowledge of what belongs to each the duty of a statesman, v. 167. civil laws not all merely positive, v. 321. two things requisite to the solid establishment of them, vi. 321. equity and utility, the two foundations of them, vi. 323. ought to be in unison with manners, vii. 27. of England, Essay towards an History of the, vii. 475. of England, written in the native language until the Norman Conquest, vii. 481. of other Northern nations, written in Latin, vii. 481. cause of this difference, vii. 481. of Canute the Great, remarks on them, vii. 483. of Edward the Confessor, so called, vii. 484. ancient Saxon, review of their sanctions, vii. 484. sources of them, vii. 487. Gentoo, sources of them, ix. 482. Mahometan, sources of them, ix. 480; xi. 216. Lawful enjoyment, the surest method to prevent unlawful gratification, iv. 256. Lawsuit, observations on that comedy, vii. 152. Learning, an at
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