 | William Carey - 1820 - 139 páginas
...with some principles to carry an act of divorce. The king would not hear of it, saying, ' 'Twas wicked to make a poor lady miserable only because she was his wife, and had had no children by him, which was not her fault. As if indeed he did not make her miserable enough... | |
 | 1823
...the king about stealing her away, and sending her to a plantation. — But the king had said " it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of her's."-j" But it was during the heat of the popish plot, that his conduct... | |
 | Gilbert Burnet - 1823 - 16 páginas
...desertion. Sir Robert Murray told me, that the king himself rejected this with horror. He said, it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers. The hints of this broke out : for the duke of Buckingham could... | |
 | Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1823
...the king about stealing her away, and sending her to a plantation. — But the king had said " it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of her's."f But it was during the heat of the popish plot, that his conduct... | |
 | 1823
...the king about stealing her away, and sending her to a plantation. — But the king had said " it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of her's."f But it was during the heat of the popish plot, that his conduct... | |
 | Gilbert Burnet - 1833
...Sir Robert Mur- 1 668. ray told me, that the king himself rejected this with horror. He said, it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers. The hints of this broke out : for the duke of Buckingham could... | |
 | Mrs. Jameson (Anna) - 1838 - 21 páginas
...fair fame, had it not been unimpeachable. The King rejected this idea with horror, saying, " it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife and had no children, which was not her fault." In that age, when satire was " worn to rags and scribbled out of fashion,"... | |
 | Agnes Strickland - 1845
...Murray told me," pursues Burnet, " that the king himself rejected this with horror. He said it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers." Buckingham next suggested that her majesty's confessor should... | |
 | Anthony Hamilton (Count) - 1846 - 546 páginas
...Buckingham proposed to steal her away and send her to a plantation; but Charles declined it, saying " It was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable, only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers." From the very commencement of Charles's reign, his thoughtless... | |
 | Agnes Strickland - 1848
...Murray told me," pursues Burnet, " that the king himself rejected this with horror. He said it was a wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable only because she was his wife, and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers." Buckingham next suggested that her majesty's confessor should... | |
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