| James Augustus St. John - 1868 - 372 pages
...should have such credit and favour with your Majesty when they wish the ill-success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest strength, and the destruction of your faithfulest servants."* Through Cecil, if in no other way, these rancorous * Birch, ii., 418. attacks... | |
| Edmund Gosse - 1886 - 268 pages
...to'-the Queen in which Essex deliberately accused him of ' wishing the ill success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest...and the destruction of your faithfullest servants.' There were some things Raleigh could not forgive, and the accusation that he favoured Spain was one... | |
| William Stebbing - 1891 - 442 pages
...should have such credit and favour with your Majesty, when they wish the ill success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest...and the destruction of your faithfullest servants ? ' His fury against Ralegh seems too excessive to Attaeks on have been genuine. In part it may be... | |
| William Stebbing - 1891 - 462 pages
...should have such credit and favour with your Majesty, when they wish the ill success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest...and the destruction of your faithfullest servants?' His fury against Ralegh seems too excessive to A «,«'** «« . • _. 1*11* Ralegh. have been genu1ne.... | |
| William Stebbing - 1891 - 446 pages
...should have such credit and favour with your Majesty, when they wish the ill success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest strength, and the destruction of your faithfullest ^_^^' servants ? ' His fury against Ralegh seems too excessive to Attacks «« have been genuine. In... | |
| Martin Andrew Sharp Hume - 1897 - 468 pages
...should have such credit and favour with Your Majesty, when they wish the ill success of Your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest strength, and the destruction of your faithful servants ? ' For the dastardly suggestion directed against Ralegh — and evidently against... | |
| Fynes Moryson - Europe - 1907 - 506 pages
...will forbeare others for 1599their places sake) should have such credit and favour with your Majestie, when they wish the ill successe of your Majesties...obey the other. Let me honestly and zealously end [II. i. 37.] a wearisome life, let others live in deceitfull and unconstant pleasure ; let me beare... | |
| Charles Townsend Copeland, Frank Wilson Cheney Hersey - Authors, English - 1909 - 694 pages
...Essex, writing to the queen on 25 June 1599, accused him of 'wishing the ill-success of your majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest...and the destruction of your faithfullest servants' (EDWARDS, i. 254), and at the last he asserted that it was to counteract Ralegh's plots that he had... | |
| Charles Townsend Copeland, Frank Wilson Cheney Hersey - Authors, English - 1909 - 666 pages
...Essex, writing to the queen on 25 June 1599, accused him of 'wishing the ill-success of your majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest strength, and the destruction of your fa1thfullest servants' (EDWARDS, i. 254), and at the last he asserted that it was to counteract Ralegh's... | |
| Edward George Harman - 1925 - 348 pages
...should have such credit and favour with your Majesty when they wish the ill-success of your Majesty's most important action, the decay of your greatest...and the destruction of your faithfullest servants ? " No doubt there is a morbid strain in all this, but the treatment of Essex in regard to his principal... | |
| |