The History of England From the Earliest Times to the Final Establishment of T

Cover The History of England From the Earliest Times to the Final Establishment of T
The History of England From the Earliest Times to the Final Establishment of T
James Mackintosh
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The news of the murder had been ac- companied to London by the imputation of the crime to Bothwell. The unexpected reserve of Melville, the Scotch envoy, excited suspicion among the English ministers. Cecil wrote to the English ambassador at Paris that rumour in Scotland implicated Bothwell, and that the Queen's name was not spared. Upon an application from Lenox to Elizabeth that she would interfere to see justice done, that princess, when she discerned that there was an intention to defeat hi...s just resentment by a pretended trial, addressed a letter to her Scottish sister, which does credit to the writer, and aggravates the guilt of her to whom it was written in vain : " For the love of God, madam, exert your prudence and sincerity, so that the world may with reason clear you of a crime so enormous that, if you were guilty, it would degrade f you from the rank of a princess. Speaking to you as I should to a daughter, I * Keith, Preface, p. F). , some- ancient French dictionary, is derived what modernised, and with the from " boyaux, " and must have omission of what seems unimpor- signified ejection, in a coarse sense, tant.

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