| John Evelyn - Great Britain - 1827 - 458 pages
...Duke of York) not thinking fit that he should be left alone with the King, desired the Earl of Bath, a Lord of the Bedchamber, and the Earl of Feversham, Captain of the Guard, should stay ; the rest being gone, father Huddleston was introduced, and administered the sacrament.... | |
| Robert Vaughan - Great Britain - 1831 - 564 pages
...duke of York) not thinking fit that he should be left alone with the king, desired the earl of Bath, a lord of the bedchamber, and the earl of Feversham, captain of the guard, should stay; the rest being gone, father Huddleston was introduced, and administered the sacrament."... | |
| Jeremy Collier - Great Britain - 1841 - 526 pages
...battle of Worcester, was desired to supply his place. James ordered all present to quit the room except the earl of Bath, lord of the bed-chamber, a.nd the earl of Feversham, captain of the guard, whose attendance he thought necessary, to prevent any sinister reports; and then introduced Huddleston... | |
| Jeremy Collier - Great Britain - 1841 - 524 pages
...battle of Worcester, was desired to supply his place. James ordered all present to quit the room except the earl of Bath, lord of the bed-chamber, and the earl of Fevcrsham, captain of thC guard, whose attendance he thought necessary, to prevent any sinister reports;... | |
| John Evelyn - 1850 - 414 pages
...Duke of York) not thinking fit that he should be left alone with the King, desired the Earl of Bath, a Lord of the Bedchamber^ and the Earl of Feversham, Captain of the Guard, should stay ; the rest being gone, father Huddleston was introduced, and administered the sacrament.... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1855 - 320 pages
...to the other end of the apartment, he knelt down by the pillow of the sick monarch, and asked if e might send for a Catholic priest. For God's sake do...to suppress, any sinister reports. In a short time Chiffinioh conducted Hudleston β the same who had waited on the king at Moseley, after the battle... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1855 - 380 pages
...For " God's sake do !" was the king's reply ; " but," he immediately added, "will it not expose yon to danger?'* James replied, that he cared not for...bed-chamber, and the earl of Feversham, captain of the guard : ail exception owing to this, that, as they were both protestants, their attendance was likely to... | |
| Royal Society of Literature (Great Britain) - English literature - 1863 - 682 pages
...the authority of Barillon, says that the Duke of York " ordered all present to quit the room, except the Earl of Bath, lord of the bedchamber, and the Earl of Feversham, captain of the guard, whose attendance he thought necessary to prevent any sinister reports, and then introduced Huddleston,... | |
| John Evelyn - Great Britain - 1878 - 450 pages
...Duke of York) not thinking fit that he should be left alone with the King, desired the Earl 01 Bath, a Lord of the Bedchamber, and the Earl of Feversham, Captain of the Guard, should stay ; the rest being gone, father Huddleston was introduced, and administered the sacrament.... | |
| English history - 1881 - 888 pages
...not expose you to danger ? " James replied that he cared not for the danger ; and, having dispatched a trusty messenger in search of a priest, stated aloud...of Bath, lord of the bed-chamber, and the earl of Fcversham, captain of the guard ; an exception owing to this, that, as they were both protestants,... | |
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