A Collection of the Most Remarkable and Interesting Trials: Particularly of Those Persons who Have Forfeited Their Lives to the Injured Laws of Their Country, Volume 2R. Snagg, 1776 |
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Results 1-5 of 99
Page 4
... night before I under- ftood that he was to be a witness . L. C. 7. You might have fent laft night , or this morning , and you fhould have had a warrant for the writ . Friend . I affure your Lordship , I did not know fo much . L. C. 7 ...
... night before I under- ftood that he was to be a witness . L. C. 7. You might have fent laft night , or this morning , and you fhould have had a warrant for the writ . Friend . I affure your Lordship , I did not know fo much . L. C. 7 ...
Page 9
... night . L. C. 7. Who is your Sollicitor , that gave you that copy ? Fr. His name is Mr. Burleigh , my Lord . Cryer . One , & c . ( So of. L. C. J. No , no , he is challenged by the King's council , as no freeholder . Fr. Then he is only ...
... night . L. C. 7. Who is your Sollicitor , that gave you that copy ? Fr. His name is Mr. Burleigh , my Lord . Cryer . One , & c . ( So of. L. C. J. No , no , he is challenged by the King's council , as no freeholder . Fr. Then he is only ...
Page 43
... night laft , about nine o'clock I came to fee him , he lay upon his bed very ill , and his wife was with him ; I asked him how he did , and he clapt his hands , and said he was very ill . Pray , faid I , what ails you ? Sure you have ...
... night laft , about nine o'clock I came to fee him , he lay upon his bed very ill , and his wife was with him ; I asked him how he did , and he clapt his hands , and said he was very ill . Pray , faid I , what ails you ? Sure you have ...
Page 43
... night laft , I came to fee Captain Blair , and his wife was with him , and Captain Blair was very ill , and clapping his hands , and groan- ing , and moving himself , and in a very mi- ferable condition , truly I thought he was giving ...
... night laft , I came to fee Captain Blair , and his wife was with him , and Captain Blair was very ill , and clapping his hands , and groan- ing , and moving himself , and in a very mi- ferable condition , truly I thought he was giving ...
Page 43
... night , yet he did not . But the next day came Mr. Burleigh to me to the Duke of Shrewsbury's office , and brought me the names of the perfons that he would have affigned him of council , and imme- diately I procured an order for it ...
... night , yet he did not . But the next day came Mr. Burleigh to me to the Duke of Shrewsbury's office , and brought me the names of the perfons that he would have affigned him of council , and imme- diately I procured an order for it ...
Common terms and phrases
Act of Parliament afked aforefaid againſt Alexander Higgins alfo anfwer aſked Baynton becauſe cafe called Capt caufe chairs confent Council counfel court crime defign defire difcourfe Duchefs Duchefs's Duke Earl England faid fame feems Feilding fent fervant feveral fhall fhew fhip fhould fide figned fince firft firſt fome fpeak Friend ftand ftatute fubject fuch fure fword fworn gentlemen guilty Hartwell hath heard himſelf honour houfe houſe indictment juft juftice jury King Lady laft libel licence Lord High Steward Lord Mohun Lord of Warwick Lord Warwick Lordships Majefty Majefty's marriage married moft moſt muſt never obferved occafion paffed pannels pardon Parliament perfon pleaſe Pray prefent prifoner Proteftant purpoſe queftion Rawlins Richard Coote ſaid ſay Scotland Serj Serjeant at Arms ſhe Sir John Freind ſpeak Swendfen tell thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe told treafon trial uſed witneffes
Popular passages
Page 298 - So then if, while her husband liveth, she be married to another man, she shall be called an adulteress : but if her husband be dead, she is free from that law ; so that she is no adulteress...
Page 631 - You receive this as an acknowledgment of your punctuality as to the time and place of meeting on Sunday last, though it was owing to you it answered no purpose. The pageantry of being armed, and the ensign of your order, were useless, and too conspicuous.
Page 631 - Exert not your curiosity too early : it is in your power to make me grateful on certain terms. I have friends who are faithful, but they do not bark before they bite.
Page 327 - Statutes in that case made and provided, and against the peace of our Sovereign Lord the King, his crown, and dignity.
Page 139 - I must be so just to such of your Lordships as profess the Religion of the Church of Rome, that you had One Temptation, and that a great one, to engage you in this Treason, which the others had not; in that it was evident.
Page 247 - ... be it enacted by the King's most excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and of the Commons in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same...
Page 452 - You shall be taken from the place where you are, and be carried to the place from whence you came, and from thence to the place of execution, and there be severally hanged by your necks until you be dead. And the Lord have mercy on your souls.
Page 632 - I am fully convinced you had a companion on Sunday : I interpret it as owing to the weakness of human nature ; but such proceeding is far from being ingenuous, and may produce bad effects, whilst it is impossible to answer the end proposed. You will see me again soon, as it were by accident, and may easily find where I go to ; in...
Page 139 - Balmerino, and every of you, return to the prison of the Tower, from whence you came ; from thence you must be drawn to the place of execution ; when you come there, you must be hanged by the neck ; but not till you...
Page 393 - ... hurdle to the place of execution, and there you shall be hanged by the neck, and being alive shall be cut down, and your...