The History of England, from the Invasion of Julius Cæsar to the Revolution in 1688. In Eight Volumes, Volume 8J. M'Creery, 1807 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 2
... a great force , sufficient to subdue the na- tion , there was little reason to trust his generosity , with regard to the use which he would make of this advantage . IN LXVI . 1674 . In all its other parts the HISTORY OF GREAT BRITAIN .
... a great force , sufficient to subdue the na- tion , there was little reason to trust his generosity , with regard to the use which he would make of this advantage . IN LXVI . 1674 . In all its other parts the HISTORY OF GREAT BRITAIN .
Page 5
... reason why the king of France and the French ministers always dissuaded him from taking off the mask , till the successes of the Dutch war should render that measure prudent and practicable . Duke of Buckingham's character of K. Charles ...
... reason why the king of France and the French ministers always dissuaded him from taking off the mask , till the successes of the Dutch war should render that measure prudent and practicable . Duke of Buckingham's character of K. Charles ...
Page 7
... reason , the allies would be inclined to refuse it . In order to give a sanction to his new measures , the king invited Temple from his retreat , and appointed him ambassador to the States . That Remon- wise minister , reflecting on the ...
... reason , the allies would be inclined to refuse it . In order to give a sanction to his new measures , the king invited Temple from his retreat , and appointed him ambassador to the States . That Remon- wise minister , reflecting on the ...
Page 12
David Hume. LXVI . CHA P. any just reasons of a prosecution ; and was therefore dropped : They applied to the king ... reason and learning of both parties were displayed on the occa- sion . The question , indeed , with regard to resist ...
David Hume. LXVI . CHA P. any just reasons of a prosecution ; and was therefore dropped : They applied to the king ... reason and learning of both parties were displayed on the occa- sion . The question , indeed , with regard to resist ...
Page 20
... reason of the unhappy projects which he embraced , was often more pernicious to the public than his inacti- vity itself . He was as anxious to promote the naval power of France , as if the safety of his crown had depended on it ; and ...
... reason of the unhappy projects which he embraced , was often more pernicious to the public than his inacti- vity itself . He was as anxious to promote the naval power of France , as if the safety of his crown had depended on it ; and ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alliance appointed army authority barons battle besieged bill bishop brother catholic CHAP character Charles Charles II church conduct conspiracy council country party court covenanters Cromwel crown Danby dangerous death declared defeated duke duke of Guise duke of York Dutch earl Edward Edward III emperor endeavoured engaged England English executed father favour France French granted Henry VIII Holland honour house of commons house of peers insurrection Ireland James Jesuits John king king's kingdom Lewis liament liberty London long parliament lord LXIX LXVI LXVII LXXI married measures ment ministers Monmouth murder nation Nimeguen obliged opposition parlia parliament passed peace peers Philip pope popery popish plot prerogative pretensions prince of Condé prince of Orange princess prisoner prorogation prosecution protestant queen Elizabeth reason refused reign religion restoration revenue Richard Scotland Scots seized sent Shaftesbury Spain statute summoned tion treaty trial violent voted