The badge of office is " A unicorn couchant Argent, horded, unguled, maned and tufted Or gorged of a coronet of four fleurs-de-lys ( two visible ) and four crosses pattee ( one and two halves visible ) Or ."
22.
The municipality s heraldic language be described thus : Per fess, in chief per pale vert a windmill argent and argent a cross sable surmounted by two glaives per saltire staves Or and heads flory gules, in base gules a bishop s staff bendwise sinister surmounted by a wolf couchant reguardant of the second.
23.
Sotheby's highlights include Claude Monet's " Le Parlement, Soleil Couchant, " which should command anywhere from $ 9 million to $ 15 million, and Max Beckmann's " Self-Portrait with Horn, " which should fetch $ 7 million to $ 10 million.
24.
"' Crests "': 1st, a Lion couchant guardant Argent supporting a Banner Gules charged with a Dexter Hand couped Argent ( Churchill ); 2nd, out of a ducal coronet Or a Griffin's Head between two Wings expanded Argent gorged with a Collar gemelle and armed Gules ( Spencer)
25.
In 1741 the Lord of the Manor and James Baker hedged, ditched and ploughed on Bonhill Common ( north-east of the village ) in an attempted enclosure; the copyholders fought and won their ancient rights to depasture their cattle, levant and couchant, and to cut bushes and furze on the Common four months in the year.
26.
The work was exhibited in April 1905 at the Galerie Legrip in Rouen ( see photograph ), and again at the Mus�e des Beaux-Arts de Rouen; inauguration 13 November 1909 . In the collection of Fran�ois Depeaux at the time, " Le Pont aux Anglais, soleil couchant " was purchased by the Mus�e des Beaux-Arts de Rouen in 1909 where it currently forms part of the permanent collection.
27.
At other times the pigs must be taken in and kept on the owner's land, with the exception that pregnant sows, known as " privileged sows ", are always allowed out providing they are not a nuisance and return to the Commoner's holding at night ( they must not be " " levant " and " couchant " " in the Forest, that is, they may not consecutively feed " and " sleep there ).
28.
Famine used some texts written in Old French by medieval French writers such as Fran�ois Villon ( for the song " Ballade cuntre les anemis de la France " ), Geoffrey of Paris ( for " La b�che et l'�p�e contre l'usurier " ), Christine de Pisan ( for " Dueil Angoisseus " ) and Guillaume de Machaut ( for " Amour ne m'amoit ne je li " ) and from modern French writers, such as Charles Baudelaire ( " Le mort joyeux " and " Spleen " ), Paul Verlaine ( " Soleils couchants " ), Tristan Corbi�re ( " Paysage mauvais " ), and Robert Brasillach ( " Psaume IV " ) in the band's first albums.