King

,—from the Saxon word Kuening, or Kuyning, is but the abbreviation of cunning or crafty, the usual distinction and epithet for knaves. According to Swift, a king ouoght to be nothing but a scare-crow placed in the midst of the fields to defend the corn; instead of which they have almost ever been the wild beasts which devouor it.

Entry taken from Political Dictionary, edited by Charles Pigott from prison and printed in 1795.

To Kidnap * King

Justice
To Kidnap
King
King
King (infallibility of the.)
King (disaffection to the)
To kiss (the breech of persons in power)
Knight
Knowing
Labour