Titauia, you can see her gentle face grow pale with pride and admiration; for did not the gallant Countess send out word to Fairfax that she would defend the place until she lost her honour or her life, for that she had not forgotten what she owed to... MacMillan's Magazine - Página 189editado por - 1872Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| David Lloyd - 1766 - 614 páginas
...foon difpatched back again with this fhort anlwer, that, jhe bad not as yet forgotten what /he ow'd to the Church of England, to her Prince, and to her Lord ; and that till jhe had kft either her Honour, or her Life, jhe would defend the place. Now for the... | |
| Edmund Lodge - 1835 - 294 páginas
...sent in militaiy form to demand an immediate surrender. The Countess replied that " she had not yet forgotten what she owed to the Church of England, to her Prince, and to her Lord; and that till she had lost her honour or her life she would defend that place." The rebels presently... | |
| 1842 - 360 páginas
...sent in military form to demand an immediate surrender. The countess answered, that " she had not yet forgotten what she owed to the church of England, to her prince, and to her lord ; and that till she had lost her honour, or her life, she would defend that place." Scarcely had the... | |
| 1846 - 170 páginas
...surrender immediately; but the trumpet was sent away with this short answer, that the countess had not yet forgotten what she owed to the Church of England, to her prince, and to her lord, and that till she had either lost her honour or her life, she would defend that place. Upon this, Fairfax... | |
| Bernard Burke - 1848 - 268 páginas
...Countess, but with no better success, the reply of the Countess being, that she had not forgotten her duty to the Church of England, to her prince, and to her lord, and that she would defend her trust •with her honour and with her life. Being ordered into Yorkshire,... | |
| Richard Cattermole - 1852 - 412 páginas
...sent in military form to demand an immediate surrender. The countess answered, that " she had not yet forgotten what she owed to the church of England, to her prince, and to her lord ; and that till she had lost her honour, or her life, she would defend that place." Scarcely had the... | |
| William McKenzie (of Edinburgh) - 1860 - 276 páginas
...trumpet was sent away with a short answer, viz., that the Countess had not as yet forgot what she did owe to the Church of England, to her prince, and to her lord ; and that till she had either lost her honour or her life, she would defend that place. Whereupon... | |
| Manx Society - 1860 - 274 páginas
...trumpet was sent away with a short answer, viz., that the Countess had not as yet forgot what she did owe to the Church of England, to her prince, and to her lord; and that till she had either lost her honour or her life, she would defend that place. Whereupon Fairfax... | |
| William McKenzie (of Edinburgh) - 1860 - 278 páginas
...trumpet was sent away with a short answer, viz., that the Countess had not as yet forgot what she did owe to the Church of England, to her prince, and to her lord ; and that till she had either lost her honour or her life, she would defend that place. Whereupon... | |
| 1866 - 618 páginas
...popular novel of Peveril of the Peat. To Fairfax's summons for capitulation, the Countess answered, " she had not forgotten what she owed to the Church of England, to her Prince, and to her Lord, and that till she had lost her honour or her life, she would defend that place." After the siege was... | |
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