| American literature - 1846 - 608 pages
...cause a servant of mine to show your grace, which is too long to write.' She had some mercy it seems. ' And I am so minded that, an I may by law of God, and to my honor, to part with him, for I wit well he loves me not, as he showeth to me daily.' She certainly... | |
| Mary Anne Everett Green - English letters - 1846 - 410 pages
...much more evil that I shall cause a servant of mine to shew your grace, which is too long to write. And I am so minded that, an I may by law of God and to my honour, to part with him, for I wit well he loves me not, as he sheweth to me daily. Wherefore I beseech your grace, when it comes to that... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1846 - 620 pages
...cause a servant of mine to show your grace, which is too long to write.' She had some mercy it seems. ' And I am so minded that, an I may by law of God, and to my honor, to part with him, for I wit well he loves me not, as he showeth to me daily.' She certainly... | |
| Agnes Strickland - Princes - 1851 - 568 pages
...was too long to write." Then comes her resolution to divorce her recreant spouse, and kindly favor her brother with her company in England for the time...so minded that, an' I may by law of God, and to my honor, to part with him, for I wit (know) well he loves me not, as he showeth to me daily ; wherefore,... | |
| Mary Anne Everett Green - Princesses - 1857 - 628 pages
...makes no reference to her husband's conjugal infidelity, only to his interference with her property. " And I am so minded that, an I may, by law of God and to my honour, to part with him ; for I wit well he loves me not, as he sheweth to me daily. Wherefore I beseech your grace, when it comes to that... | |
| Agnes Strickland, Elisabeth Strickland - Princes - 1850 - 442 pages
...and kindly favour her brother with her company in England for the time to come. Of that, Henry Vlli. and Lord Dacre, if not Wolsey, had had already enough....with "him, for I wit (know) well he loves me not, as lie showeth to me daily ; wherefore, I beseech your Grace, when it comes to that point, (that of divorce,)... | |
| James Mackenzie - Scotland - 1890 - 672 pages
...a penny." *"' Margaret determined what she would do. " I am minded," she informs her brother, " if I may by law of God and to my honour, to part with him ; wherefore I beseech your grace you will be a kind prince to me, for I shall never marry but where... | |
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