The Quarterly Review, Volume 139William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1875 |
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Page 6
... France having been re - united in the age before in all the provinces thereof formerly dismembered ; and the kingdom of Spain being of more fresh memory united and made entire by the annexing of Portugal in the person of Philip the ...
... France having been re - united in the age before in all the provinces thereof formerly dismembered ; and the kingdom of Spain being of more fresh memory united and made entire by the annexing of Portugal in the person of Philip the ...
Page 7
... : - ' Your Highness hath an Imperial Name . It was a Charles that brought the empire first into France , a Charles that brought it first into Spain , why should not Great Britain have his into Von Ranke , Pattison , Spedding , Gardiner . 7.
... : - ' Your Highness hath an Imperial Name . It was a Charles that brought the empire first into France , a Charles that brought it first into Spain , why should not Great Britain have his into Von Ranke , Pattison , Spedding , Gardiner . 7.
Page 12
... France the Italian faction was every day gaining ground , and the conflict between the noble houses and the favourite or minister was settling itself with a steady determina- tion toward the triumph of the new craft . We might trace the ...
... France the Italian faction was every day gaining ground , and the conflict between the noble houses and the favourite or minister was settling itself with a steady determina- tion toward the triumph of the new craft . We might trace the ...
Page 17
... France and the heads of the Protestants in Germany . A strong affection for England at Turin , backed by the political intelli- gence of Venice , might hereafter prove useful . But the Princess Elizabeth was a fervid Protestant , and ...
... France and the heads of the Protestants in Germany . A strong affection for England at Turin , backed by the political intelli- gence of Venice , might hereafter prove useful . But the Princess Elizabeth was a fervid Protestant , and ...
Page 18
... France for wife , a child who in England might be educated and brought over to Protestantism , whose father's death might be avenged , whose father's fame might be outshone by a Henry of England . The open foes of Spain often perished ...
... France for wife , a child who in England might be educated and brought over to Protestantism , whose father's death might be avenged , whose father's fame might be outshone by a Henry of England . The open foes of Spain often perished ...
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