| sir Henry Ellis - Great Britain - 1824 - 428 pages
...was become dim, and the stars sent but little light by reason of a great blazing Comet, which kept 1 the light of the Sun from them. His exordium being...Commons, the first by Sir Dudley Digges, the last by S' John Eliot, both which, on Thursday morning, being called out of the House as if the King had sent... | |
| 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, 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... | |
| Cyprien (de Gamaches) - Capuchins in England - 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... | |
| 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... | |
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