Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n duke_n lord_n marquis_n 2,519 5 10.8284 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25386 An account of the late horrid conspiracy to depose Their present Majesties, K. William and Q. Mary, to bring in the French and the late King James, and ruine the city of London ... also, some brief reflections on the trials of the Lord Preston, Major Ashton, and Mr. Elliot, who were chiefly concern'd therein, and found guilty / by a gentleman who was present at their trials. Gentleman who was present at their trials. 1691 (1691) Wing A313; ESTC R957 15,103 32

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

him there was so little Love ever lost Further if it should come to a Battle the very place was agreed on where they should fight the English not so high as last Summer near the Beachy but rather in the Chaps of the Channel And all this with the landing of the French and the publick defection of his Traytors at home who were immediately to come in to their assistance to be put in Execution as soon as possible after the departure of the King for Holland a Proclamation being prepared perhaps with as much as Coleman's Declaration for dissolving the Parliament to the same effect with what was discours'd in the Consult before mentioned setting all the Varnish possible on the Cause the Protestant Religion to be as surely established and defended as it was before they only to have the Government and all the poor harmless Catholicks to be left to nothing but their Devotions The Dispensing Power and Prerogative to be left where it was before that Controversie begun all Persons being also required to come under the French Standard and turn Traytors by such a day on pain of being used as if they were so In order to effect which Designs and carry on a Correspondence with the Enemies of the Nation several particular Cants being invented under which to cover their Treasonable Practices Some of the Letters were writ on pretence of Trade advising their Correspondents by all means to chuse such Factors as were bold and Industrious to fix probable ends and chuse fit means to bring them to an issue which they added was the life of Trade as well as Government Above all to be quick and expeditious as possible in their Resolutions and Actions the Sea being now open whereas a few Months hence 't would be very dangerous sailing Others were disguised in a Story of Tenants or Landlords acquainting the Person to whom 't is writ that many of the Freeholders were dissatifyed with their usage c. Others related to a Law-Suit as has been already mentioned some were Letters of Civility and Compliment as from one acquaintance to another assuing them that their Elder Brother and most of their Family were their true Friends and would continue so enquiring for their little Daughter whom tho' they had not yet seen they had heard described very pretty and Witty All this under seigned Names To Mr. Reading and Mrs. Reading Mr. Charleton and others Besides these they had several Characte●s and Keys affixed to them the more covertly to carry on the main business one wherein all the Letters of the Alphabet were made use of to signifie Persons and things one Letter standing for the K of France another for K. James a 3d. for the K. of England the Duke of Luxemburgh the Marquess with them Duke Powis and his Dutchess England Scotland Ireland Holland Dunkirk c. the Marquis of Carmarthen the Lord Devonshire the Lord Clarendon Lord Preston and several other great Persons both their Friends and Enemies But this was observable in most of their Letters that although they began with some of those sorts of Cants already mentioned and carried on the Humour pretty well yet before the Conclusion they used generally such high and profound expressions of respect and veneration as could agree to none with any common propriety of Speech but those of the first Quality and such as they thought their Soveraigns One good Man being so zealous in the Cause as to protest he could venture his hopes of Heaven upon it or an expression little below it if not the very same But after all that could be written said or done London still sticks in their Stomachs whose Citizens or Clergy they could by no means be pleased with the Clergy being as the significant memorandums express it almost all stark naught and the very worst of the whole Nation I wonder wherein have the Clergy of London obliged the Lord Preston so highly that he 's pleas'd to do them the honour of so ill a Character Not that 't is a new thing for Malefactors to give thofe who detect and prosecute 'em ill Names while they stile none Honest Fellows but such as are as great Villains as themselves In the mean time it seems all the Luidores yet receiv'd are not sufficient Money is the Life of the Cause all the World over which the Jacobites want as well as we and those Horse-leeches still cry Give Give without being ever satisfied Poor King James must he pay Pensions still when he himself is but a Pensioner The mischief is his Brass Money won't go in England nay would be out of fashon in Ireland had the Teagues any other among them So thick are the Complaints and so bold the Beggars that one may easily conclude their King can't live without them nor they without him My Lord will acquaint you with my occasions I have told my Lord my occasions The B●arer knows how I have been prest How well I have deserv'd and much more to the same purpose which the World will shortly see in the printed Tryals After all this people may chuse whether theyl'l believe any such thing as a Plot they may say and swear and yet not be perjur'd that this is as great a Sham as the Popish Plot in 78 and all those who dye for it as ●●rand Martyrs as Coleman and as innocent as the Jesuits nay had not all this been so strangely discover'd things had run on in the same current and the great Agitators but got safely off with their Papers or but got them dispos'd of safely into the bottom of the Sea had all this happen'd and the French Fleet according to appointmnet appear'd on our Coast as they did the last Summer who dared have dreamt of a Plot in 't any more than the last time or that they came for any thing else but to fish for a few Herrings on our Coast or make fine Lines across the Channel in a Sunshiny day And here I should have closed the account of this cursed Design had not a new and strange accident given us new confirmations thereof No longer since than the last Week were taken two Gentlemen coming ashore from France in a small Sloop near Lewis in Sussex Sir R. P. who by the greatness of his Genius and meer strength of his own natnral Reason both of 'em as weighty Motives as the Jesuits Arguments left the Protestant Religion for the Roman in the Reign of the late King James and would fain have had his Children Educated the same way had not their virtuous and prudent Mother placed them out of his reach The other Collonel M. and old experienced Officer Both going to a great Papists House in those parts One of these a Man of Interest and Money might have done excellently well lying there Perdue till the Plot had ripen'd then to have rais'd Forces for advancing the design and the other of more Brains and Experience when rais'd to have commanded them With these