| Sir Nathaniel William Wraxall - Europe - 1806 - 438 pages
...the King's apartment. She even forced her way into it by violence; but her enemies, aware that fhe might try to gain admittance, and juftly apprehenfive...refiftance. She returned to her own chamber, where fhe was aided to drefs herfelf, and informed that fhe muft inftantly quit Copenhagen. Rantzau had the... | |
| 1849 - 946 pages
...her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her inlluence over him, had taken the precaution of removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. " There was immured," write» a cotemporary author, "in the gloomy mansions of guilt and horror, a... | |
| Sir Robert Murray Keith - Europe - 1849 - 520 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. " Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the Queen attempted no further... | |
| University magazine - 1849 - 788 pages
...violence ; but her enemies, an .ire that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. " There was immured," writes a cotemporary author, "in the gloomy mansions of guilt and horror, a queen,... | |
| Sir Robert Murray Keith - Europe - 1849 - 558 pages
...by violence; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. " Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the Queen attempted no further... | |
| sir Robert Murray Keith - 1861 - 536 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. " Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the Queen attempted no further... | |
| Percy Fitzgerald - BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY - 1882 - 408 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him betimes to another part of the palace. "Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the queen attempted no further... | |
| Percy Hetherington Fitzgerald - Great Britain - 1882 - 412 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him betimes to another part of the palace. "Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the queen attempted no further... | |
| Percy Fitzgerald - Great Britain - 1882 - 414 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittance, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him betimes to another part of the palace. "Exhausted by the agitation of her mind, and by such exertions of body, the queen attempted no further... | |
| 1849 - 638 pages
...by violence ; but her enemies, aware that she might try to gain admittMice, and justly apprehensive of her influence over him, had taken the precaution...removing him, betimes, to another part of the palace. It was about five o'clock in the morning, when she was awakened by a Danish female attendant, who always... | |
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