Sir Walter Ralegh: The Last of the ElizabethansMacmillan and Company, Limited, 1935 - 387 pages |
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Page 187
... trial . Why Spain should be expected to help Arabella when its own Infanta claimed the English throne , no one ever troubled to explain . Nor was it explained why Ralegh should be willing to risk his life for a sum so paltry , and how ...
... trial . Why Spain should be expected to help Arabella when its own Infanta claimed the English throne , no one ever troubled to explain . Nor was it explained why Ralegh should be willing to risk his life for a sum so paltry , and how ...
Page 189
... trial of England ' is by jury and witnesses ' : ' 1 There must not be such a gulf opened for the destruction of the ... trial : Always he shall be left to the Law , which is the Right all men are born unto ' : Memoirs of Affairs , etc ...
... trial of England ' is by jury and witnesses ' : ' 1 There must not be such a gulf opened for the destruction of the ... trial : Always he shall be left to the Law , which is the Right all men are born unto ' : Memoirs of Affairs , etc ...
Page 199
... trial has ever thought Ralegh in any degree guilty , except Hallam , and perhaps Gardiner . Lingard , ' in whose Catholic eyes Ralegh was simply an unscrupulous flatterer of Elizabeth , and immoral adventurer ' , begs the issue ( ' not ...
... trial has ever thought Ralegh in any degree guilty , except Hallam , and perhaps Gardiner . Lingard , ' in whose Catholic eyes Ralegh was simply an unscrupulous flatterer of Elizabeth , and immoral adventurer ' , begs the issue ( ' not ...
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