The first known use of the word " chuckmuck " comes from 1843 from British India : " the coolness of the British soldier is shewn by his sitting down and lighting his chuckmuck and enjoying the solace of his pipe while the arrows of death were bustling around his ears ".
32.
To David Bromwich the most important of these is the third, " That the greatest strength of genius is shewn in describing the strongest passions : for the power of the imagination, in works of invention, must be in proportion to the force of the natural impressions, which are the subject of them ."
33.
Given her great experience in whoring, Lady Castlemaine would, they argued, be able to deeply sympathise with prostitutes across the city . " Should your Eminency but once fall into these Rough hands ", they wrote, " you may expect no more Favour than they have shewn unto us poor Inferiour Whores ".
34.
Therefore, whenever the occasion arises that you require to remove a director without special cause shewn, you cannot accomplish that object except under that power in the articles of association, and if you have given yourselves the power of removing the director, then you can proceed to exercise that power by an act of removal.
35.
This Time is different from that shewn by Clocks and Watches well regulated at Land, which is called equated or mean Time . " He went on to say that, at sea, the apparent time found from observation of the Sun must be corrected by the equation of time, if the observer requires the mean time.
36.
He therefore asked the bishop to " lay a copy of it at his Majesties feet " : " I think at least that I have shewn, beyond a Dispute, that my Sentiments are those of the rational Whiggs who settled the succession, upon the antient principles of the constitution, in the House of Hannover ".
37.
The mission was visited in 1843 by explorer Ludwig Leichhardt, who responded to those dismissive of the mission by saying : " The missionaries have converted no black-fellows to Christianity; but they have commenced a friendly intercourse with these savage children of the bush, and they have shewn to them the white fellow in his best colour.
38.
As he expressed it at the end of " Lear ", tragedy describes the strongest passions, and " the greatest strength of genius is shewn here in describing the strongest passions : for the power of the imagination, in works of invention, must be in proportion to the force of the natural impressions, which are the subject of them ."
39.
The business of this Court could not be carried on if one were not entitled to assume the authority of the solicitor unless and until that authority has been disputed and shewn not to exist in the proper form of proceeding, namely, a substantive application on the part of the parties concerned to stay the proceedings on the ground of want of authority ."
40.
In 1876, while making his final visit to Sanuki Hiroshima, Captain Henry St John wrote a letter to the Mayor of Hiroshima :'Sir I beg to thank you very much for the goodness and kindness of yourself and the inhabitants of Hiroshima shewn in taking care and tending the grave of the English naval officer, who was buried here in 1866.