~~ 
GRI 
to ber majelty, he exhorted her to sinliliats: that fhe 
was al creature and accountable to G This 
t 
fetter’ e enraged the queen, that fhe fent hie worthy arch- 
ee ‘order from the ftar-chamber, which caufed him 
imperio 
him a el Batter of ae ae and piety:s of unblame- 
excepting a ferm 
and ‘[ruth,”’ 
Biog. Brit. 
CGRINDELWALD, in Gengraphy, a town, or rather 
village, of Seeman in the nton Es aig at the foot 
of _humerous 
of the Sche idec. 
view o e 
‘tena into the ain Ny Grindelwald are called the {uperior and 
inferior Glaciers. ies Detwee the Wetterhorn 
and the saree 2 
y of Guaddesld, and flopes eens from barren. 
Re to fertility and cultivation 
GRIND-1 ILL, or Blade-mill, i nthe Manu ufadlures, is a 
common in the eo ibouied of Sheffield, and 
oer ‘places where cutlery, edge-tools, and erga Pe 
articles, as fe Sy ke. are manufactured : fe m a 
great number of grind-ftones are ieuted on Coa 
nd, by means of itraps, are turned with Sora velocity. 
Water, in all the rivers sade brooks near She s for- 
merly applied to thefe mills, but of late years fever ona 
fteam-engines have been applied, to work additi rind- 
mills in the town and aig hbourliood the firft of which was 
eretted by the late Mr. Francis— ei ues engineer, of 
Athover, Berbers. ee CUTLE 
an E, cos gyratalis, in Peal Hi ‘ory, i is a very 
ed, pata Sy and harih flone, of a_yellowifh 
hae, compofed of an irregular grit, cemented 
rogertee by @ coarfe and debafed terrene ¢ cryitalline matter, 
and intermixed with a very few A aie 4 peers of white 
talc ; it cuts ' 
flones. 
rg for the grning of ee iol edt ‘ack are mounte 
urned by 
it is co! 
attached to each other 
cement, witho 
filled up; as Paging is the cafe, or nearly gee the 
other kinds of fand-fton rind i t 
degrees of finenefs, in ‘ie grains of filex, according to the 
different ftrata whence they are obtained : fe 
beft for heavy stirs {uch as the grinding of gun-barrels, 
. &c. are from t F the 
ftrata Seed th: feftion of thefe, in the Phil, 
Sheffield cutlers, are from ce rocks, in the u per 
of 3 great Der bythire coal-teries ; é: 
GRiI 
mpofed are ag uniform in fize, and are firmly’ 
a filicious or other very hard. 
ut the incenihhdes between being 
-{tones are of very 
or mill. ftone grit o 
vol, xx 
former: an er counties tdartdh 
the 
grind- foace are manufactured from the coarfe grit rocks 
near the bottom of their different coal feries ; for it is rather 
remarkable, that all the grind-ftone quarries with which we 
are acquainted, are in the coal-meafures or itrata where ve- 
gétable remains abound. 
P 
Mr. Whitehur p- 168. 
or diftinguifhed 
feems to 
but at out of the 18 or 20 itlone | Ames berm “ 
prove c iniecleng 
to many a our ola to fee the falloacog lift of grinds 
i 
‘ ss taerdthire, p i 
sok ama S.E. of Wolverhampton, Staffordhhire, mid 
we. 
Bolfover, N.W. (nunnery) Derbyhhire, mi middling. 
Bredfal Moor,-N. of Deb middling 
eed e, S.E. of Shefied, Yorkie, les 
ana N heel Derby thir 
rley Moor, E. of the town, Dérbe fire coarle 
Gate-head fell, S. of stir pi Durham. % 
D aE ee 
N, of Shefireld, Yorkhhire whitening, = 
Little-Eaton, N. of Derby, coar Te oe 
ilford, Ss. 
re Warwick. “fost 
Purton, # of Wolver taffordfhire, fine. 
acs sa (im ) in ckingion, Derby hey fine 
a by Dale, E. sor sone i Derby hire fine. . a 
Stanton Moor, N.E. of ae Derbythire, coarfe, © 
‘tools are manufaétured, gr Wickertle ther 
are ufed in one nes perce a ae blade-mill,  Wokes, near fley, Yorkshire, cide ae 
and are turned by water or fleam-engines ‘GeeGuinp Mins} _ Some of ne quarries are very ancient; ett in Athover 
The ftoné fuited to pe grad tones | is what is denomina- is noticed in the Doomfday furvey, but idee'the! nclofare 
Be BS OF PEE BI A HP othe yar ha been ed ‘ 
Geren oe 
ax 
Ths fale of grind 
