The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Revolution of 1688, Band 3G. Cowie, 1825 |
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Seite 2
... give any immediate apprehensions to the lovers of their country . AV 1 TO But as Edward , though he had fixed the succession to the crown , had taken no care to establish a plan of government during the minority of his grandson , it be ...
... give any immediate apprehensions to the lovers of their country . AV 1 TO But as Edward , though he had fixed the succession to the crown , had taken no care to establish a plan of government during the minority of his grandson , it be ...
Seite 5
... give any disturbance to his neighbours ; and he laboured , besides , under many difficulties at home , which it was necessary for him to surmount before he could think of making conquests in a foreign country . England was master of ...
... give any disturbance to his neighbours ; and he laboured , besides , under many difficulties at home , which it was necessary for him to surmount before he could think of making conquests in a foreign country . England was master of ...
Seite 9
... give them a signal , after which they were to murder all the company , except the king himself , whom they were to detain prisoner , feared not to come into the midst of the royal retinue . He there behaved himself in such a manner ...
... give them a signal , after which they were to murder all the company , except the king himself , whom they were to detain prisoner , feared not to come into the midst of the royal retinue . He there behaved himself in such a manner ...
Seite 21
... , p . 354 , gives a very different character of him ; but he is a writer somewhat passionate and partial : and the choice made of this gen- garter , and had been appointed governor to Richard , 1388.1 21 RICHARD II .
... , p . 354 , gives a very different character of him ; but he is a writer somewhat passionate and partial : and the choice made of this gen- garter , and had been appointed governor to Richard , 1388.1 21 RICHARD II .
Seite 28
... give him immediate possession of the throne , by the deposition of a prince so unworthy of power and authority : and when Mortimer declined the project , he resolved to make a partition of the kingdom between himself , his two bro ...
... give him immediate possession of the throne , by the deposition of a prince so unworthy of power and authority : and when Mortimer declined the project , he resolved to make a partition of the kingdom between himself , his two bro ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
advantage alliance appeared arms army attended authority battle brother Calais chap Charles Clarence command conquest court crime crown dangerous daughter death declared duke of Bedford duke of Burgundy duke of Gloucester duke of Ireland duke of Lancaster duke of Orleans duke of York dutchess earl of Warwick Edward enemy engaged England English enterprise execution faction farther favour Ferdinand force France French gave Grafton heir Henry Henry's Holingshed honour house of Lancaster house of York jealousy king king's kingdom Lancastrians levied Lewis lord Margaret marriage Maximilian ment ministers monarch Monstrelet murder nation never nobility nobleman obliged parliament partisans party peace Perkin person Polyd Polydore Virgil possession present pretended prince princess prisoner queen rebels received regard reign rendered Richard Rymer Scotland seemed sent siege Somerset soon sovereign spirit success Suffolk thousand throne tion treaty troops victory violence Walsingham
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 237 - Queen Margaret and her son were taken prisoners and brought to the King, who asked the Prince, after an insulting manner, how he dared to invade his dominions. The young Prince, more mindful of his high birth than of his present fortune, replied that he came thither to claim his just inheritance. The ungenerous Edward, insensible to pity, struck him on the face with his gauntlet...
Seite 147 - Dunois, that her wishes were now fully gratified, and that she had no farther desire than to return to her former condition, and to the occupation and course of life which became her sex: But that nobleman, sensible of the great advantages which might still be reaped from her presence in the army, exhorted her to persevere, till, by the final expulsion of the English, she had brought all her prophecies to their full completion.
Seite 19 - A few days after, they appeared in his presence, armed, and attended with armed followers ; and they accused by name the archbishop of York, the duke of Ireland, the earl of Suffolk, Sir Robert Tresilian, and Sir Nicholas Brembre, as public and dangerous enemies to the state.
Seite 336 - Robert Ratcliffe, Thomas Cressenor, and Thomas Astwood. All these were arraigned, convicted, and condemned for high treason, in adhering and promising aid to Perkin.
Seite 272 - But he soon carried further his views for the establishment of his throne. He had married Anne, the second daughter of the earl of Warwick, and widow of Edward, prince of Wales, whom Richard himself had murdered; but this princess having...
Seite 106 - ... that France and England should for ever be united under one king ; but should still retain their several usages, customs, and privileges...
Seite 247 - The only favor which the king granted his brother after his condemnation, was to leave him the choice of his death; and he was privately drowned in a butt of malmsey in the Tower; a whimsical choice, which implies that he had an extraordinary passion for that liquor.
Seite 165 - The cardinal of Winchester died six weeks after his nephew, whose murder was universally ascribed to him as well as to the duke of Suffolk, and which, it is said, gave him more remorse in his last moments, than could naturally be expected from a man hardened, during the course of a long life, in falsehood and in politics.
Seite 222 - There is no part of English history since the Conquest so obscure, so uncertain, so little authentic, or consistent, as that of the wars between the two Roses...
Seite 96 - Tertois, at Blangi, he was surprised to observe, from the heights, the whole French army drawn up in the plains of Agincourt ; and so posted, that it was impossible for him to proceed on his march without coming to an engagement. No situation could be more unfavourable than that in which he found himself. His army was wasted with disease ; the soldiers' spirits worn down with fatigue, destitute of provisions, and discouraged by their retreat.