| William Coxe - Prime ministers - 1816 - 464 pages
...never be fully appreciated. Lord Chancellor Hardwire himself says, "Sir Robert " Walpole informed me of certain passages " between the king and himself,...interesting and important nature, than have " hitherto appeared."1^ It is however justly remarked by the same candid observe?, that those who attempted to... | |
| Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope - Great Britain - 1838 - 520 pages
...secrets untold. " Sir Robert Walpole informed me," writes Lord Hardwicke, " of certain passages be" tween the King and himself, and between the " Queen and...and important " nature than have hitherto appeared." There was one point on which at the time all parties held the same language, — that union in the... | |
| Philip Henry Stanhope (5th earl.) - 1837 - 522 pages
...secrets untold. " Sir Robert Walpole informed me," writes Lord Hardwicke, " of certain passages be" tween the King and himself, and between the " Queen and...and important " nature than have hitherto appeared." There was one point on which at the time all parties held the same language, — that union in the... | |
| Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope - Great Britain - 1837 - 494 pages
...secrets untold. " Sir Robert Walpole informed me," writes Lord Hardwicke, " of certain passages be" tween the King and himself, and between the " Queen and...and important " nature than have hitherto appeared." There was one point on which at the time all parties held the same language, — that union in the... | |
| Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope - Great Britain - 1839 - 532 pages
...secrets untold. " Sir Robert Walpole informed me," writes Lord Hardwicke, " of certain passages be" tween the King and himself, and between the " Queen and...and important " nature than have hitherto appeared." There was one point on which at the time all parties held the same language, — that union in the... | |
| George Lillie Craik - Great Britain - 1841 - 540 pages
...more in this quarrel than met the public eye. " Sir Robert Walpole," says his lordship, " informed me of certain passages between the king and himself and...and important nature than have hitherto appeared."* A few weeks after the departure of the prince from St. James's, Queen Caroline, who appears indisputably... | |
| Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope - 1841 - 464 pages
...of certain passages between the " King and himself, and between the Queen and the Prince, of loo " high and secret a nature even to be trusted to this...and important " nature than have hitherto appeared." There was one point on which at the time all parties held the same language, — that union in the... | |
| John Heneage Jesse - Great Britain - 1843 - 492 pages
...family, as " a thing that would be disagreeable to his Majesty."—Marc/imont Papers, vol. ii. p. 83. me boyish, it is purely domestic, and there is nothing,...judgment on that monarch for his former unnatural conduct towards his own father. The features, indeed, of the present estrangement bore a striking resemblance,... | |
| Charles MacFarlane - Great Britain - 1846 - 516 pages
...but from thence I found great reason to think that this unhappy difference between the king and the queen and his royal highness turned upon some points of a more interesting and important nature than nave hitherto appeared."* A few weeks after the departure of the prince from St James's, Queen Caroline,... | |
| John Hervey Baron Hervey - Great Britain - 1848 - 638 pages
...think that this unhappy difference between the King and the Queen and his Royal Highness turned on some points of a more interesting and important nature than have hitherto appeared." See also Lord Hardwicke's narrative in extenso in Harris's ' Life,' iii. 161 et seq. ; hut it affords... | |
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