My lord, do you jeer me ? — are these things to be jeered at? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship, as high in place and power, and as deep in the favour of the king as you, hath been hanged for as small a crime as... To 1726 - Page 226edited by - 1824Full view - About this book
| Sir James Mackintosh - Great Britain - 1835 - 394 pages
...me! are these things to bejeeredat? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than vour lordship, as high in place and power, and as deep...small a crime as the least of these articles contain.' " — Ella's Lett. iii. 225. t Whit. Mem. 6. I62fi. ABRESI OF MEMBERS. 4i) in his affections. You have... | |
| George Lillie Craik - Great Britain - 1841 - 686 pages
...he exclaimed, " My lord, do you jeer me ? — are these things to be jeered at ? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship, as high in place and po\ver, and as deep in the favour of the king as you, hath been hanged for as small a crime us the... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - Great Britain - 1845 - 482 pages
...he exclaimed, " My lord, do you jeer me ? — are these things to be jeered at? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...a crime as the least of these articles contain."* Sir John Eliot's quotations from Tacitus stung to the quick. For Buckingham to be a Sejanus the king... | |
| Thomas Birch - Great Britain - 1848 - 512 pages
...or the like words, " My lord, do you jeer me? are these things to be jeered at? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...Commons; the first, by Sir Dudley Digges, the last, by Sir John Eliot; both which, on Thursday morning, being called out of the house, as if the king had... | |
| Thomas Birch, Robert Folkestone Williams - 1848 - 576 pages
...the like words, " My lord, do you jeer me ? are these things to be jeered at ? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...Commons; the first, by Sir Dudley Digges, the last, by Sir John Eliot; both which, on Thursday morning, being called out of the house, as if the king had... | |
| George Lillie Craik - Great Britain - 1848 - 860 pages
...exclaimed, « My lord, do you jeer me ? — are these things to be jeered at ? My lord, 1 can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship, as high in place and power, and as deep in the favor of the king as you, hath been hanged for ¡is small a crime as the least of these articles contain."1... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1855 - 474 pages
...he exclaimed, " My lord, do you jeer me ? — are these things to be jeered at? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...a crime as the least of these articles contain."* Sir John Eliot's quotations from Tacitus stung to the quick. For Buckingham to be a Sejanus the king... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - Great Britain - 1855 - 474 pages
...he exclaimed, " My lord, do you jeer me ? —are these things to be jeered at? My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...a crime as the least of these articles contain."* Sir John Eliot's quotations from Tacitus stung to the quick. For Buckingham to be a Sejanus the king... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - 1861 - 852 pages
...he exclaimed, "My lord, do you jeer me? — are these things to be jeered at / My lord, I can show you when a man of a greater blood than your lordship,...a crime as the least of these articles contain."- Sir John Eliot's quotations from Tacitus stung to the quick. For Buckingham to be a Sejanus the king... | |
| John Forster - Great Britain - 1864 - 696 pages
...jeered at ? My lord, I can fhow " you when a man of a greater blood than your lordmip, " as high as you in place and power, and as deep in the " favour of the king, hath been hanged for as fmall a " crime as the leaft of thefe articles contain !" j With the eighth... | |
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