NOR 
gaps,and then go through, for they hate to take wing, and will 
run, at anytime, along way undera arn rather than fly 
ever it. On this depends the fuccefs of the fport. 
he noozes are to be = one in each of thefe gaps 
the woodcocks will pafs ; the 
comes, cannot eafily efcape, being taken by the legs in it, 
and when once caught he will lie tall the fportfman comes. 
While a dase is walking about a wood in this view, it 
is very common for him to find {pringes, or noozes of horfe- 
hair, cee at ef ix inches high, in feed place 
The fportfman, when he has fet eas noozes in the woods 
for the day time, fhould retire to the watery places near 
them, and fearch for the marks of thefe birds coming to 
them by their dung and other tokens. As foon asa place is 
found which they sah there muft be a {mall hedge- 
row built there alfo, in the fame manner as in the woods ; 
NOPELN,. or i, Cunard | in Geography, a town 
of Denmark, in the province of Blekingen ; it is sepaie! 
and ae farrounded by the Baltic; 23 miles N.E. 
Carl{cron 
NOQU VET s Bay, a bay of Canada, on the N.W. coaft 
of the lake Michigan ; 45, miles long and 18 wide. N. lat. 
45. 25'. 6° 201. 
NORA, atown of Sweden, i in the province of Weft- 
manland ; miles N. N. W. of Upfal. 
NOR4 
YP 
1174. He is charaGterifed as a brave and ge- 
nro cae and many inftances are related of his libe- 
ty: 
NOR 
NORAGUACHI, in Geography, atown of New Mexico, 
in the province of Cinaloa; 130 miles N E. of Cinaloa. 
NORAGUES, a river of Guiana, Lele runs inte the 
Atlantic, N. lat. 4° 50’. - long 
NORAI on a town of Cua on the river St. 
Laurence ; 26 miles N.N.E. of Montreal 
NORAMPOUR, a town of Bengal; 15 miles S.E. of 
Calcutta. 
ORANTEA, in a a name of intolerable bar- 
barifm, perverted from the Guiana appellation ee = 
tree, Corono- — and ul rejected by Schre 
ubl, er v. I. 554. t. 220. Juff. 245. Eamace 
(Ali Schreb. 358. Plo Sp. Pl. 
oo ee Asc and Mar 
ORBA, in “Ancient Ca raphy, a cone n i Italy, in 
Latium, at fome diftarce to te left of the Appian way. Its 
ruins are ftill vifible here, and confift of a wall about five or 
fix miles in circuit, gates, towers, and other traces of build- 
ings. 
Nonea Cefarea (Alcantara in Eftramadura), a town of 
Spain, in Lufitania, fituated towards n the 
agus. Pliny calls it ‘¢ Norbenfis Colonia,”’ which proves 
that it was a Roman colony 
NOR-BARKE, in re eae a stab “ Sweden, in 
Dalecarlia ; 22 miles W.S.W. of Hedem 
NORBEKITEN, a town of Praffia, j in nie province of 
‘Natangen, on the left bank uf the Pregel ; 48 miles E. of 
Konigfberg. 
NORBERG, a town of Sweden, in the province of 
Weftmanland, in the vicinity of which are the beft iron- 
mines of the peer 34 miles N. of Stroemfholm. 
Nors BERG, a town Denmark, in the ifland of Affen. 
N. lat. o zs i. net 
ERT, in Besaphy. a faint inthe Roman calen- 
se ae the Premontré order of A e 
10 was educated 
the palace of Frederic, archb:fhop of Cologne, and was is ada 
wards called to the court of the emperor Henry 
made choice of the leidiel 
the bifhopric of aces which he re He was dif- 
a pleafing perfon, eins able manners, wit 
and humour, qualities that led him mto company, by whofe 
example he was imfenfibly corrupted, and in the end he dif- 
graced his profeflion by giving himfelf up to irregularity and 
vice. length his former good principles excited the 
compun@tions of confcience, and he had fortitude to re- 
nounce his connections, and to fet himfelf ferioufly to the 
bufinefs of reformation. He refigned his different church- 
fligate. The bifhop of Laon bettowed on him a again tae 
dale, named Premontré, to which he retired in the year 1120, 
nd there founded an inftitution of canons-re,ular. hich 
he 
ifhed. To this place he attracted vait crowds by 
the cepalaniny of his fermons, and gained many difciples, 
who fubmitted to his code of difcipline, formed on the re- 
gulations of St. Auguitine, with the fevere caueice of 
perpetual 
