| Historical miscellany - 1774 - 352 páginas
...great complacency, and fanctify every meafure, which Edward embraced for that end. But the domeftic government of this prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories ; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and rigour of his adminiftration, a longer interval of domeftic p-ice... | |
| David Hume - 1775 - 434 páginas
...great complacency, andfanttiftes every meafure, which Edward embraced for that end. But the domeftic government of this prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories ; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and vigour of his adminiftration, a longer interval of domeftic peace... | |
| David Hume - 1789 - 458 páginas
...great complacency, and fanctifies every meafure, which Edward embraced for that end. But the domeftic government of this prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and vigor of his adminiflration, a longer interval of domeftic peace... | |
| David Hume - 1789 - 542 páginas
...great complacency, and fanctifies every meafure which Edward embraced for that end. But the domeftic government of this prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and vigour of his adminiftration, a longer interval of domeftic peace... | |
| Oliver Goldsmith - 1800 - 468 páginas
...Surry, deserted by all •his courtiers, even by those who had grown rich by bis bounty. He expired in the sixty-fifth year of his age, and the fifty-first of his reign; a prince A. 0.1377,; more admired than loved by bis subjects, and more an object of their applause... | |
| David Hume - 1810 - 530 páginas
...period with great complacency, and sanctifies every measure which Edward embraced for that end. But the domestic government of this prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories ; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and vigour of his administration, a longer interval of domestic peace... | |
| David Hume - 1812 - 528 páginas
...period with great complacency, and sanctifies every measure which Edward embraced for that end. But the domestic government of this Prince is really more admirable than his foreign victories; and England enjoyed, by the prudence and vigour of his administration, a longer interval of domestic peace... | |
| Antoine-François Bertrand-de-Molleville - 1812 - 528 páginas
...of ancient or modern history. The king survived his son about a year ; he died on the 28th of June 1377, in the sixty-fifth year of his age and the fifty-first of his reign. Edward's reign is one of the most glorious that occurs in the history of any country, and that which... | |
| Antoine-François Bertrand-de-Molleville - 1812 - 524 páginas
...of ancient or modern his. tory. The king survived his son about a year ; he died on the 28th of June 1377, in the sixty-fifth year of his age and the fifty-first of his reign. Edward's reign is one of the most glorious that occurs in the history of any country, and that which... | |
| John Bigland, Jedidiah Morse - 1812 - 470 páginas
...distinctly pronounced was the name of Christ, after which he immediately expired. Thus died Edward ihe Hid, in the sixty-fifth year of his age, and the fifty-first of his reign, the greatest monarch and warrior of his time ; and for all sorts of natural accomplishments, one of... | |
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