Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland: From the Dissolution of the Lst Parliament of Charles II Till the Capture of the French and Spanish Fleet at Vigo, Том 1A. Strahan, and T. Cadell, 1790 |
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Страница xxi
... land , above all other nations , juftifies a con- tempt of the fuppofition of other nations med- dling at present in her domeftic concerns ; yet fhould this fituation ever alter , pofterity may learn , from these papers , that the ...
... land , above all other nations , juftifies a con- tempt of the fuppofition of other nations med- dling at present in her domeftic concerns ; yet fhould this fituation ever alter , pofterity may learn , from these papers , that the ...
Страница 9
... lands of England which belonged not to the Sovereign , were the property of 700 of his vaffals . These making an affembly nearly as numerous as the present house of Lords and Commons united , had a right to fit in parliament ; and ...
... lands of England which belonged not to the Sovereign , were the property of 700 of his vaffals . These making an affembly nearly as numerous as the present house of Lords and Commons united , had a right to fit in parliament ; and ...
Страница 14
... lands . The extenfion of commerce produced two immediate and important effects . In the first place , it transferred ... land property at all . For , a great part of the money , which the commons acquired by commerce and parfimony , was ...
... lands . The extenfion of commerce produced two immediate and important effects . In the first place , it transferred ... land property at all . For , a great part of the money , which the commons acquired by commerce and parfimony , was ...
Страница 27
... land . The expreffions of the King and of his court were cal- culated to restore good - humour to the people , and to re- concile the animofity of parties almost spent with con- tention . To the prefbyterian clergy , who waited upon him ...
... land . The expreffions of the King and of his court were cal- culated to restore good - humour to the people , and to re- concile the animofity of parties almost spent with con- tention . To the prefbyterian clergy , who waited upon him ...
Страница 36
... land . During that war , he offered to abandon all Flan- ders to France , if the would not interpofe to fave Hol- land from the power of his arms . The ill - humours of parliament , the difgrace at Chatham , and the junction of France ...
... land . During that war , he offered to abandon all Flan- ders to France , if the would not interpofe to fave Hol- land from the power of his arms . The ill - humours of parliament , the difgrace at Chatham , and the junction of France ...
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affairs affure againſt alfo alſo ambaffador anſwer army aſked Barillon becauſe Britannic Majefty brother Buckingham caufe cauſe Charles Charles's confent confequence confiderable court crown declaration defign defire Depot difbanded diſpatches Duchefs Duke of Monmouth Duke of York Dutch Engliſh faid fame fecret fecurity fend fent fentiments fervice fhall fhew fhould figned fince firft firſt Flanders fome foon France French friendſhip ftate ftill fubjects fuccefs fuch fupport fure himſelf Holland Houfe Houſe of Commons intereft King of England King's laft laſt letter Lord Arlington Lord Danby Lord Ruffel Lord Sunderland Louis the XIVth mafter Majefty Majefty's meaſures minifters moft Chriftian Monf moſt muſt myſelf neceffary Nimeguen occafion paffed parliament peace perfons perfuaded pleaſed popular party prefent preffed Prince of Orange promiſed propofed raiſed reafon refufed refuſed Rouvigny Scotland Shaftesbury ſhall ſpeak thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe Tranflation Treaſurer treaty troops uſe
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Страница 380 - I shall die in the same principles in which I have lived, and will live no longer than they can preserve me. I have in my life been guilty of many follies ; but, as I think, of no meanness.
Страница 367 - Army corrupted, the people enslaved ; all things vendible, no man safe, but by such evil and infamous means as flattery and bribery ; what joy can I have in my own country in this condition ? Is it a pleasure to see that all I love in the world is sold and destroyed ? Shall I renounce all my old principles, learn the vile...
Страница 367 - I confess, we are naturally inclined to delight in our own country, and I have a particular love to mine. I hope I have given some testimony of it. I think that being exiled from it is a great evil, and would redeem myself from it with the loss of a great deal of my blood. But when that country of mine, which used to be esteemed a paradise, is now like to be made a stage of injury ; the liberty which we hoped to...
Страница 293 - Mr. Sidney has been of great use to me on many occasions. He is a man who was in the first wars, and who is naturally an enemy to the Court.
Страница 93 - I am going to tell you the greatest secret in the world, and my head would be in danger if it was known. The king of England at the bottom of his heart is a Catholic; but he is surrounded with Protestant bishops, and nobody tells him his condition nor speaks to him of God.
Страница 87 - The lord king of Great Britain, being convinced of the truth of the Catholic religion, and resolved to declare it and reconcile himself with the Church of Rome as soon as the welfare of his kingdom will permit...
Страница 60 - All that is true, but it is as true, that if I do not take his life, he will soon have mine,' — which would admit of no reply.
Страница 368 - ... a dear price paid for that which is not worth keeping, nor the life that is accompanied with it.
Страница 383 - Sidney aimed at the deftruftion of monarchy, and on its ruins to found that republic, which in imagination he adored. Monmouth hoped, amidft public diftraftions, to pave a way for himfelf to the tlarone.