A biographical history of England, from the Revolution to the end of George i's reign; a continuation of the rev. J. Granger's work, Volume 11806 |
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Página 14
Mark Noble. WILLIAM III . CLASS 1 . fame . In one of her letters to him , she says : - " Adieu , think of me , and love me as much as I " shall you , who I love more than my life . " In an- other " I love you more than my life , and de ...
Mark Noble. WILLIAM III . CLASS 1 . fame . In one of her letters to him , she says : - " Adieu , think of me , and love me as much as I " shall you , who I love more than my life . " In an- other " I love you more than my life , and de ...
Página 16
... letter , dated Whitehall , Sept. , 1690 , " I had a compliment last night from Q. Dow- ager , who came to town a Friday ; she sent , I believe , with a better heart , because Limericke " is not taken ; for my part , I don't think of ...
... letter , dated Whitehall , Sept. , 1690 , " I had a compliment last night from Q. Dow- ager , who came to town a Friday ; she sent , I believe , with a better heart , because Limericke " is not taken ; for my part , I don't think of ...
Página 20
... man of breeding . When she wrote to congratulate him upon taking Na- mur , he never answered her letter . When with WILLIAM 111. CLASS 1 . child , fancying peas , child , 20 THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND . WILLIAM 111. GLASS I. ...
... man of breeding . When she wrote to congratulate him upon taking Na- mur , he never answered her letter . When with WILLIAM 111. CLASS 1 . child , fancying peas , child , 20 THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND . WILLIAM 111. GLASS I. ...
Página 21
... letter of con- dolence made an impression in her favour : he sent her all her sister's jewels . During the re- mainder of his reign he was civil , but never kind . She did not complain ; if she esteemed , she did not love him . Alluding ...
... letter of con- dolence made an impression in her favour : he sent her all her sister's jewels . During the re- mainder of his reign he was civil , but never kind . She did not complain ; if she esteemed , she did not love him . Alluding ...
Página 23
... letter to William , asking the order of the garter for Lord , in the next reign Duke of Marlborough . " C " Sir , " I beg leave once more to put you in mind of " the promise you made me of a garter , which I hope you will now remember ...
... letter to William , asking the order of the garter for Lord , in the next reign Duke of Marlborough . " C " Sir , " I beg leave once more to put you in mind of " the promise you made me of a garter , which I hope you will now remember ...
Termos e frases comuns
admiral afterwards appointed baron baronet bart became bishop bishop of Salisbury brother buried Burnet Cambridge character Charles Charles II church CLASS VIII CLASS XI countess court daugh daughter of sir death died duke earl Edward eldest Elizabeth England engraved Faber sc Faithorne father France gentleman GILBERT BURNET Granger Gucht sc heir honour Ireland James James II JOHN LOCKE JOHN TILLOTSON justice king Kneller knighted lady large fol liam lived London lord loved majesty married MARY II MATTHEW PRIOR ment monarch nobleman oval Oxford parliament person portrait prefixed Prince of Denmark Prince of Orange Princess privy privy counsellor Queen Ann reign Restoration royal Salisbury SAMUEL GARTH Schomberg Scotland sent Sermons sir George Sir GODFREY sir John sir William Smith sc Somers Tillotson tion Vertue sc White ad vivum White sc whole length wife WILLIAM III
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 248 - When love was all an easy monarch's care; Seldom at council, never in a war; Jilts ruled the state, and statesmen farces writ; Nay, wits had pensions, and young lords had wit; The fair sat panting at a courtier's play, And not a mask went unimproved away ; The modest fan was lifted up no more, And virgins smiled at what they blush'd before.
Página 82 - Dr. Burnet was extravagantly fond of tobacco and writing ; to enjoy both at the same time, he perforated the broad brim of his large hat, and, putting his long pipe through it, puffed and wrote, and wrote and puffed again.
Página 123 - I have heard him tell how much he surprized the doctor, the first time he waited upon him after he was turned out by the act of uniformity : for when the doctor asked him, " Prythee (child.) what made thee a nonconformist?" " Truly, Sir," saith Mr. Henry, " you made me one ; for you taught me those things that hindered me from conforming.
Página 256 - He has made the world merry, and I hope they will make him easy so long as he stays among us. This I will take upon me to say, they cannot do a kindness to a more diverting companion, or a more cheerful, honest, and good-natured man.* No.
Página 103 - A dean and prebendary Had once a new vagary, And were at doubtful strife, sir, Who led the better life, sir, And was the better man, And was the better man. The dean he said, that truly, Since Bluff was so unruly, He'd prove it to his face, sir, That he had the most grace, sir, And so the fight began, &c.
Página 373 - Bucks), in a cave, had been a man of tolerable wealth, was looked upon as a pretty good scholar, and of no contemptible parts. Upon the Restoration he grew melancholy, betook himself to a recluse life...
Página 40 - He was the finest gentleman in the voluptuous court of Charles the Second, and in the gloomy one of King William. He had as much wit as his first master, or his contemporaries, Buckingham and Rochester ; without the royal want of feeling, the Duke's want of principles, or the Earl's want of thought.
Página 163 - I am glad of it. Gentlemen of the jury, when I was young and thoughtless, and out of money, I, and some companions as unthinking as myself, went to this woman's house, then a publick one : we had no money to pay our reckoning.
Página 279 - ... (a hill not to be commanded, and where the air is always clear and serene), and to see the errors and wanderings and mists and tempests in the vale below; so always that this prospect be with pity, and not with swelling or pride.
Página 184 - On the accession of Queen Anne, he was made a Lieutenant-General of the Forces in Holland; Commander-in-Chief of the Forces in Ireland under the Duke of Ormond, March 23, 1705 ; and, ' to keep him out of the way of action,' subsequently one of the Lords Justices, a circumstance which it is said broke his heart.