The Memoirs of the Honourable Sir John Reresby, Bart. and Last Governor of York: Containing Several Private and Remarkable Transactions, from the Restoration to the Revolution InclusivelyS. Harding, 1734 - 349 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 49
Side 6
... Kingdom was now very rich , and Men were generally fatisfied with the King's Return , tho ' fome Malecontents of feveral Sorts there were ; and how fhould it be o- therwife ? But the King did not much ad- here here to Business : All was ...
... Kingdom was now very rich , and Men were generally fatisfied with the King's Return , tho ' fome Malecontents of feveral Sorts there were ; and how fhould it be o- therwife ? But the King did not much ad- here here to Business : All was ...
Side 19
... Kingdom ; and was the moft vio- lent Blow that had been given to the Church of England from the Day of the Re- ftoration . All Sectaries now publickly re- paired to their Meetings and Conventicles ; nor could all the Laws afterwards ...
... Kingdom ; and was the moft vio- lent Blow that had been given to the Church of England from the Day of the Re- ftoration . All Sectaries now publickly re- paired to their Meetings and Conventicles ; nor could all the Laws afterwards ...
Side 51
... for the Safety of thefe Kingdoms , and the Recovery of Flanders , and to abate the Power of the French King . 1677 . May 28 . In answer to this , E 2 In Of Sir JOHN RERESBY . 51 my Eftate to any Perfon whatsoever, but ...
... for the Safety of thefe Kingdoms , and the Recovery of Flanders , and to abate the Power of the French King . 1677 . May 28 . In answer to this , E 2 In Of Sir JOHN RERESBY . 51 my Eftate to any Perfon whatsoever, but ...
Side 52
... Kingdoms ; adjourning them to the 16th Day of July following . f In the mean time , having heard that my Lord Yarmouth was one that had begged my Eftate , upon the Occafion of the Death of my Black , and understanding that his Lord ...
... Kingdoms ; adjourning them to the 16th Day of July following . f In the mean time , having heard that my Lord Yarmouth was one that had begged my Eftate , upon the Occafion of the Death of my Black , and understanding that his Lord ...
Side 55
... to lay down their Arms , till the Treaty of the Pyrenies was performed , and till the French King was re- duced to the Condition he then was in ; for E 4 that 1617. that without this , neither this Kingdom , nor Of Sir JOHN RERES BY . 55.
... to lay down their Arms , till the Treaty of the Pyrenies was performed , and till the French King was re- duced to the Condition he then was in ; for E 4 that 1617. that without this , neither this Kingdom , nor Of Sir JOHN RERES BY . 55.
Andre udgaver - Se alle
The Memoirs of the Honourable Sir John Reresby, Bart. and Last Governor of ... John Reresby Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
The Memoirs of the Honourable Sir John Reresby, Bart. and Last Governor of ... John Reresby Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Addrefs adviſed affift affured againſt alfo alſo Anſwer Army becauſe Biſhops Buſineſs Cafe Caufe Cauſe Church Church of England Commiffion Commons Confideration Council Courſe Court Crown Days afterwards declared Defign defired Duchefs Duke of Mon Duke of Monmouth Duke of York Earl Earl of Danby England fafe faid fame Day feemed felf fent ferve feveral fhort fhould fince firft fome foon France Friends ftand ftill fuch fuffer Gentlemen greateſt hapned Highneſs himſelf Horſe Houfe Houſe of Lords Intereft Juftice King's Kingdom laft late London Lord Danby Lord Hallifax Lord Mayor Lord Privy Seal Lord Sunderland Lord Treaſurer Lordship Majefty Marquifs ment moft Money moſt Number obferved Occafion paffed Papifts Parliament Perfon pleaſed Popish prefent Prince Prince of Orange promiſed Proteftant Purpoſe Queen raiſed Reaſon refolved Religion Rochefter ſaid Scotland ſeemed ſeveral ſome ſtand themſelves ther theſe Things thofe thoſe told uſed voted
Populære passager
Side 318 - I, AB, do swear that I do from my heart abhor, detest, and abjure as impious and heretical, that damnable doctrine and position that princes excommunicated or deprived by the pope, or any authority of the see of Rome, may be deposed or murdered by their subjects, or any other whatsoever. And I do declare that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath, or ought to have, any jurisdiction, power, superiority, preeminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm...
Side 303 - ... that -king James II. having endeavoured to subvert the constitution of the kingdom, by breaking the original contract between the king and the people ; and having...
Side 178 - The manner of the king's dividing his time at this place was thus : he walked in the morning till ten of the clock ; then he went to the cockpit till dinner-time ; about three he went to the horse-races ; at six he returned to the cockpit, for an hour only ; then he went to the play, though the actors were but of a terrible sort ; from thence to supper ; then to the Duchess of Portsmouth's till bedtime ; and so to his own apartment to take his rest.
Side 228 - ... during which he aped all the great lawyers of the age, in their tone of voice, and in their action and gesture of body, to the very great ridicule, not only of the lawyers, but of the law itself...
Side 245 - ... to go or come, to sleep or not. The dishes and bottles were all the time before them on the table ; and when it was morning, he would hunt or hawk, if the weather was fair ; if not, he would dance, go to bed at eleven, and repose himself till the evening. Notwithstanding this irregularity, he was a man of great sense, and though, as I just now said, some took him...
Side 129 - Halifax to ask his pardon for some things he had been reported to have said against his Lordship; in good policy we ought to suffer no man to be our enemy if we can possibly avoid it, but such was his Lordship's natural disposition, that in the whole course of my life, I never knew a man more ready at all times to forgive, and shall never forget his expression upon this occasion — " Sir, if you did not say the words, I am very glad of it; and even if you did, I am glad you find cause to be of another...
Side 19 - The prince was naturally averse to it, but being once entered, was more frolic and gay than the rest of the company ; and now the mind took him to break the windows of the chambers belonging to the maids of honour, and he had got into their apartments had they not been timely rescued. His mistress, I suppose, did not like him the worse for such a notable indication of his vigour.
Side 18 - One night, at a supper given by the Duke of Buckingham, the king made him drink very hard. The prince was naturally averse to it, but being once entered, was more frolic and...
Side 229 - ... they had stripped into their shirts; and that had not an accident prevented them, they had got up on a...
Side 283 - ... of the many grievances we laboured under, but by a free parliament ; that now was the only time to prefer a petition of the sort ; and that they could not imitate a better pattern than had been set before them by several lords spiritual and temporal.