| Francis Bacon - English essays - 1824 - 624 pages
...conveyed and laid up in the Tower. Notwithstanding all this, the king was, as was partly touched before, grown to be such a partner with fortune, as nobody...what the other owned. For it was believed generally, that Perkin was betrayed, and that this escape was not without the king's privity, who had him all... | |
| John Ford - Dramatists, English - 1827 - 638 pages
...sufficiently clear from the exulting language of this wily monarch in the scene with Urswick, p. 95. that he had made himself sure of the overthrow of...king was grown to be such a partner with Fortune, as no body could tell what actions the one, and what the other owned. It was generally believed, he adds,... | |
| John Ford - 1827 - 630 pages
...sufficiently clear from the exulting language of this wily monarch in the scene with Urswick, p. 95. that he had made himself sure of the overthrow of...king was grown to be such a partner with Fortune, as no body could tell what actions the one, and what the other owned. It was generally believed, he adds,... | |
| John Ford - Dramatists, English - 1827 - 672 pages
...overthrow of VVarbeck, whom he bad, by this time, environed with his agents : hence the disgraceful night of the usurper, the recourse to the sanctuary of Bewley,...king was grown to be such a partner with Fortune, as no body could tell what actions the one, and what the other owned. It was generally believed, he adds,... | |
| John Ford - 1831 - 396 pages
...sufficiently clear from the exulting language of this wily monarch in the scene with Urswick, p. 315, that he had made himself sure of the overthrow of...king was grown to be such a partner with Fortune, as no body could tell what actions the one, and what the other owned. It was generally believed, he adds,... | |
| John Ford - 1831 - 644 pages
...sufficiently clear from the exulting language of this wily monarch in the scene with Urswick, p. 30l, that he had made himself sure of the overthrow of...with his agents ; hence the disgraceful flight of the pretender, the recourse to the sanctuary of Bewley, and subsequent surrender. Bacon shrewdly observes,... | |
| Francis Bacon, Basil Montagu - 1848 - 594 pages
...conveyed and laid up in the Tower. Notwithstanding all this, the king was, as was partly touched before, grown to be such a partner with fortune, as nobody...what the other owned. For it was believed, generally, that Perkin was betrayed, and that this escape was not without the king's privity, who had him all... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1852 - 580 pages
...conveyed and laid up in the Tower. Notwithstanding all this, the king was, as was partly touched before, grown to be such a partner with fortune, as nobody...what the other owned. For it was believed, generally, that Perkin was betrayed, and that this escape was not without the king's privity, who had him all... | |
| Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1876 - 364 pages
...conveyed and laid up in the Tower. Notwithstanding all this, the King was, as was partly touched before, grown to be such a partner with fortune as nobody could tell what actions the one, and 10 what the other owned. For it was believed generally, that Perkin was betrayed, and that this escape... | |
| Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1877 - 782 pages
...conveyed and laid up in the Tower. Notwithstanding all this, the king was, as was partly touched before, grown to be such a partner with fortune, as nobody...what the other owned ; for it was believed generally that Perkin was betrayed, and that this escape was not without the king's privity, who had him all... | |
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