The Works of Lord Macaulay Complete: History of EnglandLongmans, Green, and Company, 1897 |
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Results 1-5 of 76
Page 5
... hope of being recompensed for their patience hereafter , and though Hickes assured them that there was not a single Compounder in the whole Theban legion , very few churchmen were inclined to run the risk of the gallows merely for the ...
... hope of being recompensed for their patience hereafter , and though Hickes assured them that there was not a single Compounder in the whole Theban legion , very few churchmen were inclined to run the risk of the gallows merely for the ...
Page 6
... hope for the smallest mark of favour from the banished King . The priests and the apostate Melfort , the avowed enemy of the Protestant religion and of civil liberty , of Parliaments , of trial by jury and of the Habeas Corpus Act ...
... hope for the smallest mark of favour from the banished King . The priests and the apostate Melfort , the avowed enemy of the Protestant religion and of civil liberty , of Parliaments , of trial by jury and of the Habeas Corpus Act ...
Page 9
... hope that he had seen his error . They had refused to have anything to do with Melfort : but they communicated freely with Middle- ton . The new minister conferred also with the four traitors whose infamy has been made preeminently ...
... hope that he had seen his error . They had refused to have anything to do with Melfort : but they communicated freely with Middle- ton . The new minister conferred also with the four traitors whose infamy has been made preeminently ...
Page 13
... hope that he had seen his error . They had refused to have anything to do with Melfort : but they communicated freely with Middle- ton . The new minister conferred also with the four traitors whose infamy has been made preeminently ...
... hope that he had seen his error . They had refused to have anything to do with Melfort : but they communicated freely with Middle- ton . The new minister conferred also with the four traitors whose infamy has been made preeminently ...
Page 19
... hope that he might again be able to snatch some military glory without any hazard to his person , and had hastened back rather than expose himself to the chances of a pitched field . * This was not the first time that His Most Christian ...
... hope that he might again be able to snatch some military glory without any hazard to his person , and had hastened back rather than expose himself to the chances of a pitched field . * This was not the first time that His Most Christian ...
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Common terms and phrases
accused army Bank Bank of England bill Bill of Attainder Boufflers called carried CHAP Charnock chief Court Crown danger debate declared Duke Dutch enemies England English Exchequer favour Fenwick France French friends gentlemen Godolphin honour hope House of Bourbon House of Commons hundred Jacobites James Journals Kensington King kingdom L'Hermitage land less letter Lewis liberty London Gazette Lords Majesty Marlborough Mary of Modena master ment ministers Montague nation never Parliament party passed peace Peers person plot Portland Postman Prince Prince of Orange question reason received resolution royal Russell Ryswick Saint Germains Scotland seemed sent session Shrewsbury soldiers Somers soon Spain Spanish Spanish monarchy Sunderland thought thousand pounds throne tion Tories Treasury treaty trial troops Vernon to Shrewsbury votes Wharton Whig whole William witness XXII XXIII XXIV СНАР
Popular passages
Page 161 - portance than the achievements of William's army or of Russell's fleet, were taking place in London. A great experiment was making. A great revolution was in progress. Newspapers had made their appearance. While the Licensing Act was in force there was no news- Effect of paper in England except the London Gazette, which was
Page 341 - cumstances which attracted general interest, and which might furnish a good subject to a novelist or a dramatist. Near fourteen years before this time, Sunderland, then Secretary of State to Charles the Second, had married his daughter Lady Elizabeth Spencer to Donough Macarthy, Earl of Clancarty, the lord of an immense domain in
Page 103 - About the same time Dryden, whose reputation was then in the zenith, received thirteen hundred pounds for his translation of all the works of Virgil, and was thought to have been splendidly remunerated.* It was not easy to fill satisfactorily the high place which Tenison Tillotson had left vacant. Mary gave her voice for Stilling-
Page 106 - of He had but too good reason to be uneasy. His wife had, *' during two or three days, been poorly; and on the preceding evening grave symptoms had appeared. Sir Thomas Millington, who was physician in ordinary to the King, thought that she had the measles. But Radcliffe, who, with coarse manners
Page 174 - Commons should, at that moment, be disposed to cooperate cordially with the King. For it was absolutely necessary to apply a remedy to an internal evil which had by slow degrees grown to a fearful magnitude. The silver coin, which was then the standard coin of the realm, was in a state
Page 59 - could not, in his opinion, be explained by the ignorance and imbecility of those who had charge of the naval administration. There must have been treason. It was impossible to believe that Lewis, when he sent his Brest squadron to the Straits of Gibraltar, and left the whole coast of his kingdom from Dunkirk to
Page 117 - head of Stafford and the head of Russell; this was a course which contemporaries, heated by passion, and deluded by names and badges, might not unnaturally call fickle, but which deserves a very different name from the late justice of posterity. There is one and only one deep stain on the memory of this
Page 20 - 1693, desired L'Hermitage to collect and transmit to them intelligence of what was passing in England. His letters abound with curious and valuable information which is nowhere else to be found. His accounts of parliamentary proceedings are of peculiar value, and seem to have been so considered by his employers. Copies of the despatches of
Page 283 - exalted motive. It is probable that, having been driven from office by the Whigs and forced to take refuge among the Tories, he thought it advisable to go with his party.* As soon as the bill had been read a third time, the attention Proceedof the Peers was called to a matter which deeply concerned
Page 178 - twenty-four ounces. The same test was applied in various parts of the kingdom. It was found that a hundred pounds, which should have weighed about four hundred ounces, did actually weigh at Bristol two hundred and forty ounces, at Cambridge two hundred and three, at Exeter one hundred and eighty, and at Oxford only one hundred and sixteen.