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Other editions - View allCommon terms and phrases100 Captain aforesaid army artillery Bearehaven brother Burke camp Captain Harvy Captain Roger Harvy Carberry Carew Carew Castle Carty castle of Donboy Castlehaven cause charge command Connaught Cork Cormock Coyne delivered Desmond divers Don John Don Juan Donnell O'Sulevan Donogh doth Earl of Clanricarde Earl of Thomond enemy England English favour foot forces garrisons George Cary George Thornton Groyne hath haue honour horse Hugh Roe hundred hurt Irish island Juan de Aguila Kerry King of Spain Kinsale Knight of Kerry land letters Lieutenant Lixnaw Lord Deputy Lord President Lordship MacCarty Majesty Majesty's munition Munster night O'Donnell O'Driscall O'Neill O'Sulevan Beare O'Sullivan ordnance Owen Pedro President and Councell President's prisoner province Queen rebellion rebels received regiment Rincorran sayd sent ships shot siege siege of Kinsale Sir Charles Wilmot Sir George slain soldiers Spaniards Spanish thousand Tirrell town trenches Tyrone unto victuals wherein whereof Popular passagesPage 316 - she might have written her own laws, or have tied the illdisposed and rebellious hands till I had surely planted such a government as would have overgrown and killed any weeds that should have risen under it ; yet, since the necessity of the State doth so urge a diminution of this great Page 14 - ever more service of worth •were performed in shorter space than you have done we are deceived. Among many eye-witnesses we have received the fruit thereof, and bid you faithfully credit, that what so wit, courage, or care may do, we truly find they have Page 318 - them, in the distribution of such lands as they have formerly possessed, or the State here can make little use of for Her Majesty. If they continue as they ought to do, and yield the Queen as much commodity as she may otherwise expect, she hath made a good purchase of Page 316 - it fit any otherwise to declare your Lordships' pleasure therein. And whereas it pleased your Lordships in your last letters to command us to deal moderately in the great matter of religion, I had before the receipt of your Lordships' letters presumed to advise such as dealt in it, for a time to hold a more restrained hand therein, and we Page 317 - or discipline; nor that the truth of the Gospel can with too great vehemence or industry be set forward in all places, and by all ordinary means most proper unto itself, that was first set forth and spread in meekness Page 350 - You shall in all things that bee moved, treated, and debated in any Councell, faithfully and truely declare your mind and opinion according to your heart and conscience : In no wise forbearing so to doe for any respect of Favour, Meade, Dreade, Displeasure, or corruption. Yee shall faithfully and uprightly to the best of your power, cause Justice to bee duely and indifferently Page 317 - were both thinking ourselves what course to take in the revocation of what was already done, with least encouragement to them and others, since the fear that this course begun in Dublin would fall upon the rest, Page 192 - becomes of our delays or insufficiencies, be ye of heroical minds, for of such consequence is the keeping of that castle that every one there shall surpass in deserts any of us here, and for noble, valiant soldiers shall pass immortal throughout all ages to come. For the better encouraging, let these words be read in their hearing. Out of Page 316 - moderately in the great matter of religion, I had before the receipt of your Lordships' letters presumed to advise such as dealt in it, for a time to hold a more restrained hand therein, and we Bibliographic information |