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Calendar of Treasury Papers
… day the Lord Chief Baron Eyre was paid. This had been done in the cases of all the judges lately, and was so when … Gallery at Kensington, &c. As the gilding had always been done by his predecessors and himself, he thinks it a great … but the Attorney General did not conceive that it could be done by law. The Attorney General considered that the fee of …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… assistance, and it was the promises from England that had done more than anything to induce him to accept the … obligation, for it was utterly wasted, the Swedes having done more harm there in one year than the Spaniards did in … and the efforts of the foreign ministers to get something done only met with evasion (Nos. 426, 429). At the beginning …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… not shut their eyes to the harm which the Palatine had done in Germany (No. 68). Bavaria offered even more serious … received a promise that nothing to his prejudice should be done at the diet (No. 83). Arundel for his part openly called … to protect the Palatine and to prevent anything being done there to his prejudice, or failing that, to denounce …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… be reserved for his return, when he hoped he would have done something to deserve it (No. 204). The course of his … kept to himself as much as his predecessor Radolti had done, 5 and seems to have done nothing beyond proffering the usual empty assurances …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… for Digby and told him roughly that in Flanders he had done nothing, at a great expense, and he must take care not … there was any blame it did not attach to his king, who had done all he could, but to the emperor (No. 217), while Digby … a strong remonstrance to the king about the grave injury done to his reputation and the imminent peril to the kingdom …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… for the sake of the cardinal. The affair seems to have done much to estrange her from her native land (No. 713). But … and he had become convinced that nothing could or would be done in the future. He left England declaring that his master … Swedish camp (Nos. 751, 753, 760). Yet although they had done so little to help Sweden, the English government claimed …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… empty (No. 3). The army, finding that nothing was being done to provide for its pay, grew ominously restive and the … began almost immediately to regret what they had done. The superior officers by no means represented the … that he would seize the supreme power, as Cromwell had done before him. The ferment in the army appeared by a …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… Tower on his return home. Alberti believed that this was done in order to leave the way open for a settlement, because … of ingratitude he declared that all that England had done for Spain was out of self interest, because the loss of … to get to the Hague, Charles replied that nothing could be done without the concurrence of France. As he did not wish to …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… On the whole the nation felt satisfied with what had been done. They praised the king for having accepted the … 7 and they almost immediately repented of what had been done. A courier was despatched to try and recover the brief … that the Dutch might again appear off London as Ruyter had done in 1667 (No. 479). The Spaniards flattered themselves …
Calendar of State Papers Relating to English Affairs in the Archives of Venice
… their good will (No. 306). A great deal was actually done in order to make things easy for them, and it was … and installed Bennet in his place. Everything was done to soften the stroke. It was given out that Nicholas had … gone to see the site before the action, as Batteville had done (No. 66). Estrades, to whose persistence against the …