Brambletye House: Or, Cavaliers and Roundheads : a Novel, Band 1Colburn, 1826 - 296 Seiten |
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... England getteth drunk For joy that Charles her monarch is restor❜d . And she , that sometime wore a saintly mask , The stale grown vizor from her face doth pluck , And weareth now a suit of morris - bells , With which she jingling goes ...
... England getteth drunk For joy that Charles her monarch is restor❜d . And she , that sometime wore a saintly mask , The stale grown vizor from her face doth pluck , And weareth now a suit of morris - bells , With which she jingling goes ...
Seite 16
... England : ' on the other side , the cross and harp , and the words ' God with us .'- Might not a scoffer now remark , that even by the confession of their own coin , the States and God are not on the same side ? ” 6 " And might they not ...
... England : ' on the other side , the cross and harp , and the words ' God with us .'- Might not a scoffer now remark , that even by the confession of their own coin , the States and God are not on the same side ? ” 6 " And might they not ...
Seite 44
... England and Ireland , a representa- tion of the Parliament House , and the following in- scription " The Council of Estates appointed by the Parliament of England . " There was little room for deliberation where there was but one ...
... England and Ireland , a representa- tion of the Parliament House , and the following in- scription " The Council of Estates appointed by the Parliament of England . " There was little room for deliberation where there was but one ...
Seite 72
... - ay , I recollect Sir Philip Warwick telling me , the same year the Scotch army first came into England , that upon his entering the House of Commons , he saw a fellow speaking , or rather squeaking , in 72 BRAMBLETYE HOUSE .
... - ay , I recollect Sir Philip Warwick telling me , the same year the Scotch army first came into England , that upon his entering the House of Commons , he saw a fellow speaking , or rather squeaking , in 72 BRAMBLETYE HOUSE .
Seite 73
... England ! However , Rowley is at St. Malo's , and will presently come over with his Mounseers to set matters to rights , and send the usurping knave to hold his last court at Tyburn . " With this comfortable assurance , Sir John having ...
... England ! However , Rowley is at St. Malo's , and will presently come over with his Mounseers to set matters to rights , and send the usurping knave to hold his last court at Tyburn . " With this comfortable assurance , Sir John having ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
apprehension arms Ashdown forest Baronet better Brambletye House Bruges called cavalier songs Cavaliers chaplain Colonel Lilburne companion concealed countenance cried Sir John Cromwell crop-eared Culpepper curse dark declaring door Duke Duke of York Dunkirk East Grinstead ejaculated England escape exclaimed eyes father favour gaoler gate Gate-house Giles Groombridge hall hand hastily head heard honour Hopton Heath horse hour hurried immediate inquired Jack Whittaker Jocelyn King King's landlord Lockhart look Lord Lord Protector Majesty Marquess Marquess of Ormond master ment Monarch morning never night Noll observed pedlar Pickering pistol present prison proceeded Protector Puritans racter rapier rascal replied Sir rogues Roundheads Royalists seemed seized Serjeant Whittaker singing Sir John Compton Sir William soldiers song sword thee thou thought tion troop turned utterly vaults voice wall Waynfleet whole party wish woman word
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 133 - ... family ; to do all this under the name and wages of a parliament; to trample upon them too as he pleased, and spurn them out of doors when he grew weary of them ; to raise up a new and...
Seite 133 - ... overcome with equal facility both the riches of the south and the poverty of the north; to be feared and courted by all foreign princes, and adopted a brother to the gods of the earth; to call together parliaments with a word of his pen.
Seite 199 - My Lady Gerrard treated us at Mulberry Garden, ' now the onely place of refreshment about the towne for persons of the best quality to be exceedingly cheated at...
Seite 157 - This night I was invited by Mr. Roger L'Estrange to hear the incomparable Lubicer on the violin. His variety on a few notes and plain ground, with that wonderful dexterity, was admirable. Though a young man, yet so perfect and skilful, that there was nothing, however cross and perplexed, brought to him by our artists, which he did not play off at sight with ravishing sweetness and improvements, to the astonishment of our best masters.
Seite 18 - Barrow shall be sainted ; There's neither cross nor crucifix Shall stand for men to see, Rome's trash and trumpery shall go down, And hey, then, up go we...
Seite 133 - ... and to command them victoriously at last ; to over-run each corner of the three nations, and overcome with equal facility both the riches of the south and the poverty of the north ; to be...
Seite 133 - ... what can be more extraordinary than that a person of mean birth, no fortune, no eminent qualities of body, which have sometimes, or of mind which have often, raised men to the highest dignities, should have the courage to attempt, and the happiness to succeed in so improbable a design as the destruction of one of the most ancient and most solidly-founded monarchies upon the earth...
Seite 157 - In sum, he played on the single instrument a full concert, so as the rest flung down their instruments, acknowledging the victory. As to my own particular, I stand to this hour amazed that God should give so great perfection to so young a person.
Seite 32 - A hound and a hawk no longer Shall be symptoms of disaffection ; A cock-fight shall cease to be breach of the peace, And an horse-race an insurrection.
Seite 21 - But a beggar's a beggar and so he shall be, Unless he turn Traytor, Let Misers take courses to hep up their treasure, Whose lust has no limits, whose mind has no measure Let me be but quiet and take a little pleasure, A little contents my nature. My Petition shall be that Canary be cheaper, Without Patent or Custom, or cursed Excise ; That the Wits may have leave to drink deeper and deeper, And not be undone, while their heads they baptise, And in liquor do drench 'um ; If this were but granted,...