FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   290   291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   309   310   311   312   313   314  
315   316   317   318   319   320   321   322   323   324   325   326   327   328   329   330   331   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   >>   >|  
. 580. [par. 176.] _Clarendon_. The Scots were resolved to have _no more_ to do with his Majesty.--_Swift_. Gave up the King. VOLUME III. On the bastard title: That frequent expression,--_upon the word of a king_, I have always despised and detested, for a thousand reasons. Dedication, 21st par. [vol. I., p. li., edit of 1888.] _Clarendon._ Some very near that King ... putting him on the thoughts of marrying some Roman Catholic lady.--_Swift_. As he did. BOOK X. P. 2. [par. 2.] _Clarendon_. Sir Dudley Wyat had been sent expressly from the Lord Jermin, to assure the prince, that such a body of five thousand foot were actually raised under the command of _Ruvignie_, and should be embarked for Pendennis within less than a month.--_Swift_. Father to Lord Galloway; a Huguenot. P. 6. [par. 11.] _Clarendon_, Upon the Queen's hearing that the King had gone to the Scots army, she:--renewed her command for the prince's immediate repair into France; whereas the chief reason before was, that he would put himself into the Scots' hands.--_ Swift_. He could not do worse. P. 7 [par. 12] _Clarendon_ The King ... was by this time known to be in the Scots army--_Swift_. And these hell hounds sold him to the rebels. P. 11 [par. 21] _Clarendon_ [The Scots] had pressed the King to do many things, which he had absolutely refused to do, and that thereupon they had put very strict guards upon his Majesty, ... so that his Majesty looked upon himself as a prisoner--_Swift_. The cursed Scots begin their new treachery. P. 14 [par. 27] _Clarendon_, on "the paper Montrevil sent to the King, being a promise for the Scots receiving the King, Apr 1"--_Swift_. Montrevil might as safely promise for Satan as for the Scots. _Ibid_. [par. 28] _Clarendon_ on Montrevil's advertising the King of the change in the Scotch--_Swift_. Will Montrevil trust them again? P. 15 [ditto] _Clarendon_ [The Sots] with much ado agreed, that the two princes [Rupert and Maurice] ... might follow the King, with such other of his servants as were not excepted from pardon--_Swift_. And why those? Because the Scots were part of the rebels. P. 16 [par. 30] _Clarendon_, in a letter from Montrevil--"They tell me that they will do more than can be expressed"--_Swift_. So the Scots did, and with a vengeance. _Ibid_. [ditto] _Clarendon_, in the same--"The hindering his Majesty from falling into the hands of the English is of so great importance to them, that i
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   290   291   292   293   294   295   296   297   298   299   300   301   302   303   304   305   306   307   308   309   310   311   312   313   314  
315   316   317   318   319   320   321   322   323   324   325   326   327   328   329   330   331   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Clarendon

 

Montrevil

 
Majesty
 

rebels

 

command

 
prince
 
promise
 
thousand
 

refused

 

pressed


receiving
 

things

 

absolutely

 
cursed
 
looked
 
prisoner
 
treachery
 

strict

 

guards

 
hounds

letter

 

Because

 

expressed

 

importance

 

English

 
falling
 

vengeance

 

hindering

 

pardon

 

Scotch


change

 

safely

 
advertising
 

follow

 

servants

 

excepted

 

Maurice

 
Rupert
 

agreed

 

princes


putting

 

thoughts

 

marrying

 

Dudley

 

Catholic

 
Dedication
 
VOLUME
 

resolved

 

bastard

 

despised