History of the reign of king Henry vii, with notes by J.R. Lumby |
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Page i
... UNIVERSITY PRESS . JAN 1878 · DLEIANAY AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . London : CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE , 17 , PATERNOSTER Row . Cambridge : DEIGHTON , BELL , AND CO . 1876 . [ All Rights reserved . ] Cambridge : PRINTED BY C. J. CLAY , M.A. AT ...
... UNIVERSITY PRESS . JAN 1878 · DLEIANAY AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . London : CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE , 17 , PATERNOSTER Row . Cambridge : DEIGHTON , BELL , AND CO . 1876 . [ All Rights reserved . ] Cambridge : PRINTED BY C. J. CLAY , M.A. AT ...
Page i
... JAN 1878 ODLEIANA AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . London : CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE , 17 , PATERNOSTER ROW . Cambridge : DEIGHTON , BELL , AND CO . 1876 . [ All Rights reserved . ] PRINTED Cambridge : BY C. J. CLAY , M. A. Pitt Press Series .
... JAN 1878 ODLEIANA AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . London : CAMBRIDGE WAREHOUSE , 17 , PATERNOSTER ROW . Cambridge : DEIGHTON , BELL , AND CO . 1876 . [ All Rights reserved . ] PRINTED Cambridge : BY C. J. CLAY , M. A. Pitt Press Series .
Page ii
Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) Joseph Rawson Lumby. PRINTED Cambridge : BY C. J. CLAY , M. A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . THE HISTORY of the REIGN OF King HENRY the Seventh.
Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) Joseph Rawson Lumby. PRINTED Cambridge : BY C. J. CLAY , M. A. AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS . THE HISTORY of the REIGN OF King HENRY the Seventh.
Page v
... University until his sixteenth year . The father designed his son for diplomatic life , and therefore after entering him of Gray's Inn , sent him to France as one of the suite of Sir Amyas Paulet , who went to Paris as English ...
... University until his sixteenth year . The father designed his son for diplomatic life , and therefore after entering him of Gray's Inn , sent him to France as one of the suite of Sir Amyas Paulet , who went to Paris as English ...
Page 225
... Universities of Oxford and Cambridge , in the titles bestowed upon the readers in divinity , the chairs for which she endowed . Christ's College and St John's in Cambridge are also monuments , of her devotion . She was likewise a ...
... Universities of Oxford and Cambridge , in the titles bestowed upon the readers in divinity , the chairs for which she endowed . Christ's College and St John's in Cambridge are also monuments , of her devotion . She was likewise a ...
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afterwards ambassadors archduke attainder Bacon battle better bishop blood Brittany Burgundy Calais called Cambridge Charles VIII council counsellors court crown daughter death Demy Octavo divers duchess duke of Britain duke of Brittany duke of York earl of Lincoln Edward IV Edward the fourth Elizabeth English father favour Ferdinando Flanders forces fortune France French King grace hath Henry VII Henry's honour house of York howsoever Ireland James King Edward King Henry King of England King of Scotland King Richard King's kingdom lady Margaret Lambert Simnel land late Latin likewise London lord lord Lovel Lovel marriage married matter Maximilian means Naples nevertheless nobles pardon parliament party peace Perkin person Philip Plantagenet Pope Prince principal Queen realm rebels reign sanctuary sent shew Spain Spedding statute subjects succours thereof things Thomas thought Tower town treaty unto Wherefore wherein William wise word
Popular passages
Page 272 - He being thus lorded, Not only with what my revenue yielded. But what my power might else exact, — like one Who having unto truth, by telling of it, Made such a sinner of his memory, To credit his own lie...
Page 221 - He was born at Pembroke castle, and lieth buried at Westminster, in one of the stateliest and daintiest monuments of Europe, both for the chapel and for the sepulchre. So that he dwelleth more richly dead, in the monument of his tomb, than he did alive in Richmond, or any of his palaces.
Page 155 - ... creation, as in St. George's Fields, where his own person had been encamped. And for matter of liberality, he did, by open edict, give the goods of all the prisoners unto those that had taken them; either to take them in kind, or compound for them, as they could. After matter of honour and liberality, followed matter of severity and execution. The lord Audley was led from Newgate to Tower-Hill, in a paper coat painted with his own arms; the arms reversed, the coat torn, and he at Tower-Hill beheaded.