But Dudley, though the most favoured, was not considered as her only lover: among his rivals were numbered Hatton and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious habits survived even when the... Private Character of Queen Elizabeth - Page 164by Frederick Chamberlin - 1921 - 334 pagesFull view - About this book
| English literature - 1824 - 696 pages
...: among his rivals were numbered Hatton and Raleigh:, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...when the fires of wantonness had been quenched by the chili of age. The court imitated the manners of the sovereign. It wag a place in which, according to... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1825 - 572 pages
...rivals were numbered Heneage, and Hatton and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blo.unt, and Simierand Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...fires of wantonness had been quenched by the chill of age.82 The court imitated the manners of the sovereign. It was a place in which, according to Faunt,... | |
| Richard Alfred Davenport - Conduct of life - 1827 - 410 pages
...lover: among his rivals were numbered Hatton and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...It was a place in which, according to Faunt, " all enorrallies reigned in the highest degree," or, according to Harrington, " where there was no love,... | |
| New elegant extracts, Richard Alfred Davenport - English literature - 1827 - 406 pages
...: among his rivals were numbered Hatton and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...It was a place in which, according to Faunt, " all enorraities reigned in the highest degree," or, according to Harrington, " where there was no love,... | |
| Richard Alfred Davenport - Conduct of life - 1827 - 404 pages
...: among his rivals were numbered Hatton and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...the sovereign. It was a place in which, according to Faun I, " all enormities reigned in the highest degree," or, according to Harrington, " where there... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1827 - 714 pages
...lover: among his rivals were numbered Hatton, and Raleigh, and Oxford and Blount, and Simier and Anjou: and it was afterwards believed that her licentious habits survived, even when the fire's of wantonness had been quenched by the chill of age.J The court imitated the manners of the... | |
| Thomas Keightley - Great Britain - 1839 - 568 pages
...historical romance) describes her as " callous to every sense of shame," and misquotes Osborne to hint that " her licentious habits survived even when the...wantonness had been quenched by the chill of age." He enumerates as her gallants Leicester, Hatton, Raleigh, Oxford, Blount, Simier, and Anjou. Even protestants... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1840 - 406 pages
...Hatton, and Raleigh, and Oxford, and Blount, and Simiur, and Anjou -, and it was afterwards believed (hat her licentious habits survived, even when the fires...of wantonness had been quenched by the chill of age (1). The court imitated Ihe manners of the sovereign. It was a place in which, according to Faunt,... | |
| John Lingard - 1847 - 488 pages
...among his rivals were numbered Hatton, and Raleigh, and Oxford, and Blount, and Simier, and Anjou ; and it was afterwards believed that her licentious...Faunt, "all enormities reigned in the highest degree V or according to Harrington, " where there was no " love, but that of the lusty god of gallantry,... | |
| Richard Robert Madden - Catholics - 1847 - 362 pages
...shame." " Among his rivals," he adds, "were numbered Hatton, Raleigh, Oxford, Blount, Simier, and Anjou : and it was afterwards believed, that her licentious...wantonness had been quenched by the chill of age."* Such was the person whom the Roman Catholics of England and Ireland were called on to acknowledge as... | |
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