The History of England from the Accession of James II, Nide 6Houghton, Mifflin, 1886 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 82
Sivu 11
... thought safe for the ships to proceed further in the darkness . William , tired out by the voyage , and impatient to be once more in his beloved country , determined to land in an open boat . The noblemen who were in his train tried to ...
... thought safe for the ships to proceed further in the darkness . William , tired out by the voyage , and impatient to be once more in his beloved country , determined to land in an open boat . The noblemen who were in his train tried to ...
Sivu 12
... thought it prudent to follow his example . They lay tossing in sight of the flame which he had kindled , till the first pale light of a January morning showed them that they were close to the island of Goree . The King and his Lords ...
... thought it prudent to follow his example . They lay tossing in sight of the flame which he had kindled , till the first pale light of a January morning showed them that they were close to the island of Goree . The King and his Lords ...
Sivu 14
... thought that the first minister of Holland had become a great King , had freed the English , and had conquered the Irish . It would have been madness in William to travel from Hampton Court to Westminster without a guard : but in his ...
... thought that the first minister of Holland had become a great King , had freed the English , and had conquered the Irish . It would have been madness in William to travel from Hampton Court to Westminster without a guard : but in his ...
Sivu 20
... thought most unconstitutional ; and many own minister writers , applying the standard of their own affairs . age to the transactions of a former age , have severely blamed William for acting without the advice of his ministers , and his ...
... thought most unconstitutional ; and many own minister writers , applying the standard of their own affairs . age to the transactions of a former age , have severely blamed William for acting without the advice of his ministers , and his ...
Sivu 21
... thought it , not only the right , but the duty , of the first magistrate to gov- ern . All parties agreed in blaming Charles the Second for not being his own Prime Minister : all parties agreed in praising James for being his own Lord ...
... thought it , not only the right , but the duty , of the first magistrate to gov- ern . All parties agreed in blaming Charles the Second for not being his own Prime Minister : all parties agreed in praising James for being his own Lord ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
accused allies appeared army authority battle bill Bishop Breadalbane Burnet called camp chief Church command Company Court Crown D'Usson declared Dutch enemies England English favour fleet force France French Gallienus Ginkell Glencoe Godolphin Henry Luttrell honour House of Commons House of Stuart hundred Ireland Irish Irish army Jacobite James Journals June justice King land letter Lewis Limerick London Gazette Lord Lieutenant Louvois Mac Ian Macariæ Excidium Macdonalds Majesty Marlborough Massacre of Glencoe Master of Stair Memoirs ment ministers Narcissus Luttrell's Diary nation never nonjurors oaths officers Papists Parliament party passed peer Penn persons plot princes Queen Rapparee reason regiments Revolution Roman Catholic royal Russell Saint Germains Saint Ruth Sancroft Sarsfield scarcely seemed sent Siege Siege of Athlone soldiers soon Story's Continuation strange thought thousand Tillotson tion Tories Treaty of Limerick troops truth Tyrconnel Whigs whole William