Lives of the queens of England, from the Norman conquest. By A. [and E.] Strickland, Том 111847 |
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Страница 14
... council days , so that the face of a court was now quite broke . This gave an early and general disgust . The gaiety and diver- sions of court disappeared ; and , though the queen set her- self to make up what was wanting in the king by ...
... council days , so that the face of a court was now quite broke . This gave an early and general disgust . The gaiety and diver- sions of court disappeared ; and , though the queen set her- self to make up what was wanting in the king by ...
Страница 34
Agnes Strickland. to London , and that it would be possible to hold councils there when his asthma would not permit him to breathe a smoke - polluted atmosphere.1 The solemn entry of the Dutch ambassadors , being Odyck , Dyckvelt , and ...
Agnes Strickland. to London , and that it would be possible to hold councils there when his asthma would not permit him to breathe a smoke - polluted atmosphere.1 The solemn entry of the Dutch ambassadors , being Odyck , Dyckvelt , and ...
Страница 40
... councils at St. James's palace , and his queen took that opportunity of recreating herself with seeing a play . There was but one play which had been forbidden to be acted by James II . , and this his daughter particularly desired to ...
... councils at St. James's palace , and his queen took that opportunity of recreating herself with seeing a play . There was but one play which had been forbidden to be acted by James II . , and this his daughter particularly desired to ...
Страница 55
... council to travel to Hampton Court to meet the king there , and represented that a palace at Kensington would be a great convenience . " " In the first year of queen Mary's reign , most of her household were Dutch ; a few of the higher ...
... council to travel to Hampton Court to meet the king there , and represented that a palace at Kensington would be a great convenience . " " In the first year of queen Mary's reign , most of her household were Dutch ; a few of the higher ...
Страница 61
... councils , and yet 1 Conduct , by the duchess of Marlborough . 2 Ibid . 3 Kensington , as the name implies , had always been a demesne of the crown , from the Saxon era . It was the nursery palace of the Tudors , when the court was at ...
... councils , and yet 1 Conduct , by the duchess of Marlborough . 2 Ibid . 3 Kensington , as the name implies , had always been a demesne of the crown , from the Saxon era . It was the nursery palace of the Tudors , when the court was at ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
archbishop archbishop Sancroft believe Berkeley House bishop Burnet Campden House Catherine of Braganza child command conduct coronation council crown Dalrymple's Appendix daughter death Denmark Devonshire duchess of Marlborough duke of Gloucester Dutch earl Elizabeth Villiers English father favourite fleet give Hampton Court honour Hooper hope husband Ireland Jacobite James II James's Kensington Kensington Palace king and queen king James king William king's lady Fitzharding lady Marlborough letter Lewis Jenkins likewise London lord Marlborough lord Monmouth lord Nottingham lord Torrington majesty majesty's MARY TO KING Mary's ment mind never night palace parliament person present prince George princess Anne queen Mary QUEEN REGNANT received reign revolution royal highness Russell Sancroft seems sent Shrewsbury Sion sister sovereigns tell thing thought throne Tillotson tion told took uncle Whitehall wife William and Mary William III Windsor young duke
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Страница 22 - He that ruleth over men must be just, ruling in the fear of God. And he shall be as the light of the morning, when the sun riseth, even a morning without clouds; as the tender grass springing out of the earth by clear shining after rain.
Страница 332 - Who is on my side? who?" And there looked out to him two or three eunuchs. And he said, "Throw her down." So they threw her down: and some of her blood was sprinkled on the wall, and on the horses : and he trode her under foot.
Страница 201 - We, your majesty's most dutiful and loyal subjects, the lords spiritual and temporal, in parliament assembled...
Страница 5 - She rose early the next morning, and in her undress, as it was reported, before her women were up, went about from room to room to see the convenience of Whitehall ; lay in the same bed and apartment where the late Queen lay, and within a night or two sat down to play at basset, as the Queen her predecessor used to do.
Страница 28 - I AB do sincerely promise and swear, That I will be faithful, and bear true allegiance, to their Majesties King William and Queen Mary: So help me God.
Страница 346 - ... tis impossible to imagine a more delightful spectacle. She had embellished all this with considerable magnificence, which made her look as big again as usual ; and I should have thought her one of the largest things of God's making if my Lady St.
Страница 311 - The day before she died she received the Sacrament; all the bishops who were attending, being admitted to receive it with her. We were, God knows, a sorrowful company, for we were losing her who was our chief hope and glory on earth ; she followed the whole office...
Страница 80 - Marlborough, which methinks is unaccountable. Lord Nottingham desired I would sign letters to the governors of Berwick and Carlisle, not to let any persons go by who had not a pass, and that they should stop all the mails. This I have done, and the express is to be immediately sent away.
Страница 22 - The Spirit of the Lord spake by me, and his word was in my tongue. The God of Israel said, the Rock of Israel spake to me, He that ruleth over men must be just, ruling in the fear of God.
Страница 321 - The gardenage," that had airs in it " freer than those that were more stiff," was, at the close of the seventeenth century, completely on a par with the Dutch architecture perpetrated by Mary and her spouse. Neither was worth placing in the list of a queen-regnant's virtues.