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" (he writes in another place), " I see you deciphered it well " (they frequently corresponded in cipher), " and I see you make use of it too; do so still, thorough and thorough. Oh that I were where I might go so too ! but I am shackled between delays... "
Archbishop Laud and Priestly Government - Page 172
by Henry Bradley Bell - 1905 - 333 pages
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A History of the British Empire: From the Accession of Charles I ..., Volume 2

George Brodie - Great Britain - 1822 - 582 pages
...resistance. The feelings of the man may be conceived from the following language to Wentworth in J634*. " As for my marginal note, I see you deciphered it well ; and I see you make use of it too : Do so still ; thorough and thorough. Oh ! that I were where I might go so too ; but I am shackled between delays...
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A History of the British Empire: From the Accession of Charles I ..., Volume 2

George Brodie - Great Britain - 1822 - 630 pages
...I see you deciphered it well; and I see you make use of it too: Do so still; thorough and thorough. Oh! that I were where I might go so too; but I am shackled between delays and uncertainties t." It was under consultation to send out a bishop to the American colonies to insist upon uniformity,...
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The Constitutional History of England from the Accession of Henry VII to the ...

Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1827 - 648 pages
...(they frequently corresponded in cypher), and I see you make use of it so s^» thorough and thorough. Oh that I were where I might go so too ! but I am...honour here for your proceedings; go on a God's name." "I have done/' he says some years afterwards, "with expecting of Thorough on this side*." It is evident...
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The Constitutional History of England from the Accession of Henry ..., Volume 2

Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1827 - 510 pages
...frequently corresponded in cypher) , and I see you make use of it too ; do so still , thorough and thorough. Oh that I were where I might go so too ! but I am...deal of honour here for your proceedings ; go on a ' Straft'ord Letters, i. in. ' P. i55. It is evident that the remissness of those with whom he was...
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Lives of Eminent British Statesmen ...: Sir John Eliot; Thomas Wentworth ...

Statesmen - 1836 - 446 pages
...into Ireland shot comfort to the heart of Laud. "As for my marginal note," exclaims the archbishop, " I see you deciphered it well, and I see you make use...of honour here for your proceedings. Go on a God's name!"2 And on Wentworth went, stopping at no gratuitous quarrel that had the slightest chance of pleasing...
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The Autobiography of Dr. William Laud: Archbishop of Canterbury, and Martyr ...

William Laud - Bishops - 1839 - 584 pages
...somebody, where I conceive it should not; and it is impossible for me to go thorough alone." Again : "As for my marginal note, I see you deciphered it...and thorow. Oh that I were where I might go so too 1 But I am shackled between delays and uncertainties'." Now it is possible the Archbishop might think...
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The Pictorial History of England: Being, a History of the People ..., Volume 4

George Lillie Craik - Great Britain - 1841 - 686 pages
...AND MILITARY TRANSACTIONS. 173 tied in England, he goes on to say, " Oh that I were л here I niight , the King of Denmark's are red herrings, the Hollanders'...King of England's are ambassadors.t At the same time name.1' Until this memorable correspondei.ce and other documents, wherein they both stand committed...
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The Statesmen of the Commonwealth of England: With a Treatise on ..., Volume 1

John Forster - Great Britain - 1846 - 726 pages
...into Ireland shot comfort to the heart of Laud. " As for my marginal note," exclaims the archbishop, " I see you deciphered it well, and I see you make use...honour here for your proceedings. Go on a God's name !"§ And on Wentworth went, stopping at no gratuitous quarrel that had the slightest chance of pleasing...
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The Aristocracy of England: A History for the People

William Howitt - Aristocracy (Social class) - 1846 - 376 pages
...as you promise for yourself, and justly conceive of me As for my marginal note, I see you decypher it well ; and I see you make use of it, too : do so still, thorough and thorough. ... Oh ! that I were where I might go so too ! But I am shackled between delays...
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