The History of England: The history of England: reigns of Edward the SixthLongman, Orme, Brown and Green, and Longman, 1839 |
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Pagina xv
... person Her foibles Examination of the charge of personal vice Mary's statement of lady Shrewsbury's scandal Lady Shrewsbury's character Mary's accusation of her calumny A Spaniard's report The Frenchman's Manners of her court ...
... person Her foibles Examination of the charge of personal vice Mary's statement of lady Shrewsbury's scandal Lady Shrewsbury's character Mary's accusation of her calumny A Spaniard's report The Frenchman's Manners of her court ...
Pagina 7
... person meant to establish popery by force in her own coun- try , and was under the influence of papal agency . But the more the English cabinet receded from such a positive and committing enactment , fresh with the recollection of her ...
... person meant to establish popery by force in her own coun- try , and was under the influence of papal agency . But the more the English cabinet receded from such a positive and committing enactment , fresh with the recollection of her ...
Pagina 21
... person present ) a man of meek and gentle spirit , did what he could to mitigate her anger . The said John [ Knox ] stood still without any alteration of countenance for a long time , while the queen gave place to her inordinate ...
... person present ) a man of meek and gentle spirit , did what he could to mitigate her anger . The said John [ Knox ] stood still without any alteration of countenance for a long time , while the queen gave place to her inordinate ...
Pagina 23
... person who would preclude all fear and mistrust in her mind of being dispossessed of her throne , and with whom she could appoint the Scottish prin- cess her successor.88 She spoke very kindly of Mary , and seemed to take much interest ...
... person who would preclude all fear and mistrust in her mind of being dispossessed of her throne , and with whom she could appoint the Scottish prin- cess her successor.88 She spoke very kindly of Mary , and seemed to take much interest ...
Pagina 33
... person . ' Lett . in Robertson , append . v . 3. p . 220. To avoid pledging herself or the English government to their cause , she expressly added : Except to preserve them from ruin , we do not yield to give them aid of money or men ...
... person . ' Lett . in Robertson , append . v . 3. p . 220. To avoid pledging herself or the English government to their cause , she expressly added : Except to preserve them from ruin , we do not yield to give them aid of money or men ...
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admiral afterwards altho ambassador answer bishop of Ross BOOK Bothwell cabinet Camd cardinal Castle Catena Catherine Catherine de Medicis Catholic cause Cecil CHAP Charles Charles IX church cipher command confessed conspiracy council court crown danger death declared desired Digges dispatch duke of Alva duke of Guise duke of Norfolk earl Edinburgh Elizabeth enemies English evil favor Flanders force France French friends hath Haynes heretics HIST honor Huguenots Huntley husband Jesuits Keith king of Spain king's kingdom Leicester Lett letter lord Burghley Maitland marriage Mary Mary's massacre matter Melv Melville mentioned mind Morton Murd murder Murray Navarre never nobility papal Paris party person Pius pope prince of Orange privy Protestant queen of England queen of Scots realm reason rebels Reformation religion Ridolfi Rome Romish says Scotland Scottish secret sent shew sovereign Spanish subjects things thro tion unto Walsingham wished wrote СНАР
Populaire passages
Pagina 128 - English court for the examination of this great cause were, the Duke of Norfolk, the Earl of Sussex, and Sir Ralph Sadler ; and York was named as the place of conference.
Pagina 429 - What hath he lost that such great grace hath won ? Young years for endless years, and hope unsure Of fortune's gifts for wealth that still shall dure : O happy race, with so great praises run...
Pagina 468 - ... twelve days; and in her discourse she fetched not so few as forty or fifty great sighs. I was grieved at the first to see her in this plight, for in all my lifetime before I never knew her fetch a sigh, but when the Queen of Scots was beheaded. Then, upon my knowledge, she shed many tears and sighs, manifesting her innocence that she never gave consent to the death of that Queen.
Pagina 423 - Love my memory, cherish my friends; their faith to me may assure you they are honest. But above all, govern your will and affections, by the will and Word of your Creator; in me, beholding the end of this world, with all her vanities.
Pagina 452 - We princes are set on stages ; in the sight and view of all the world, duly observed.
Pagina 429 - A sweet attractive kind of grace ; A full assurance given by looks ; Continual comfort in a face, The lineaments of Gospel books — I trow that count'nance cannot lye, Whose thoughts are legible in the eye.
Pagina 553 - Then the good man told her plainly, ' what she was, and what she was to come to ; and though she had been long a great Queen here upon earth, yet shortly she was to yield an account of her stewardship to the King of kings.
Pagina 574 - Hocks-Tuesday, setting forth the destruction of the Danes in King Ethelred's time ; with which the queen was so pleased, that she gave them a brace of bucks, and five marks in money, to bear the charges of a feast.
Pagina 435 - My Lords, and ye of the Lower House, my silence must not injure the owner so much as to suppose a substitute sufficient to render you the thanks that my heart yieldeth you, not so much for the safe keeping of my life for which your care appears so manifest, as for the neglecting your private future peril, not regarding other way than my present state. No Prince herein, I confess, can be surer tied or faster bound than I am with the link of your good will...
Pagina 549 - Queen ill disposed, and she kept her inner lodging ; yet she, hearing of my arrival, sent for me. I found her in one of her withdrawing chambers, sitting low upon her cushions. She called me to her, I kissed her hand, and told her it was my chiefest happiness to see her in safety and in health, which I wished might long continue. She took me by the hand, and wrung it hard, and said,