Boscobel: or, The history of his sacred majesties ... preservation after the battle of Worcester [by T. Blount]. With a suppl. to the whole1748 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Acquaintance almoſt alſo anſwered Army Aſſiſtance attend his Majesty Battle of Worcester becauſe Bentley beſt Boscobel brought Captain cauſed CHARLES STUART Charmouth cloſe Colonel commanded Cromwell Danger defired Deſign Diſguiſe Duke Earl of Derby Enemies England Eſcape facred fafe faid faithful fame fent Fidelity fince firſt flain fome foon France fuch George Giffard Gunter Hands Hele himſelf Honour Horſe Houſe Huddleston Jane Lane jeſty King King's Lady Lane laſt lonel Lord Wilmot Lordſhip loyal Majesty Majesty's Maſter Means Miles Monk Morning moſt Night Number obſerved Parliament Paſs Paſſage paſſed Penderel Perſons Peters pleaſed Pleaſure preſently Preſervation Prince Rebels reſolved reſt Richard Richard Penderel Royal ſafe ſame ſay Scotland ſecure ſent Servant ſerved ſeveral ſhe ſhort ſhould ſince Sir John ſmall Soldiers ſome ſtill ſuch ſuſpected themſelves thence ther theſe thither Thomas thoſe took tranſport Trent Troop Ufurpation whilst Whiteladies Whitgreave whoſe William Worcester Wyndham
Fréquemment cités
Page 192 - ... fellow as Cromwell first entering the Parliament House with a threadbare, torn cloak, and a greasy hat (and perhaps neither of them paid for), could have suspected, that, in the space of so few years, he should, by the murder of one king and the banishment of another, ascend the throne, be invested in the royal robes, and want nothing of the state of a king but the changing of his hat into a crown...
Page 23 - Giffard (a faithful subject, and of the ancient family of Chillington) to be his majesty's conductor, which office Mr Giffard willingly undertook, having one Yates a servant with him, very expert in the ways of that country ; and being come near Sturbridge, it was under consideration whether...
Page 8 - ... of these unnatural wars be buried and forgotten. As a means whereunto, we have by our warrants of the date hereof, and do hereby summon, upon their allegiance, all the nobility, gentry, and others of what degree and condition soever, of our county of Worcester, from sixteen to sixty, to appear in their persons, and with any horses, arms, and ammunition they have or can procure, at Pitchcroft, near the city, on Tuesday next, being the 26th of this instant month, where ourself will be present that...
Page 110 - ... of their own imaginations, that God Almighty would not have led him through so many wildernesses of afflictions of all kinds, conducted him through so many perils...
Page 157 - Farewel to Trent, the Ark in which God shut him up, when the Floods of Rebellion had covered the face of his Dominions. Here he rested Nineteen days, to give his faithful Servants time to work his deliverance : And the Almighty crowned their endeavours with success, that his Majesty might live to appear as Glorious in his Actions, as Couragious in his Sufferings.
Page 49 - William cut it up and brought a leg of it into the parlour ; his majesty called for a knife and a trencher, and cut some of it into collops, and pricked them with the...
Page 34 - ... stifled for want of air, and had perished for want of food, had he not been once relieved in the dead of the night, and with much difficulty, by a trusty servant ; yet his lordship thought it a great providence, even by these hardships, to escape the fury of such enemies, who sought the destruction of the nobility, as well as of their king. In this interim the valiant Earl of Cleveland (who, being above sixty years of age, had marched twenty-one days together upon a trotting horse), had also...
Page 89 - Tuesday morning (September 16), his majesty's ague being then (as was pretended) in the recess, he repaired to the stable, and there gave order for making ready the horses ; and then it was signified from Mrs Lane (though before so agreed), that William Jackson should ride single and carry the portmanteau ; accordingly they mounted, being attended part of the way by one of Mr Norton's men...
Page 192 - Who, that had looked upon Agathocles first handling the clay, and making pots under his father, and afterwards turning robber, * could have thought, that from such a condition he should come to be king of Sicily ? Who, that had seen...
Page 35 - Blague in the Tower, by the trusty hands of Mr. Isaac Walton ; and the colonel not long after happily escaping thence, restored it to his majesty's own hands, which had been thus wonderfully preserved from being made a prize to sordid rebels. The Scotch cavalry (having no place to retreat unto nearer than Scotland) were soon after dispersed, and most of them taken by the rebels and country people in Cheshire, Lancashire, and parts adjacent. Thus was this royal army totally subdued, thus dispersed...