. Old England : a pictorial museum of regal, ecclesiastical, baronial, municipal, and popular antiquities . of the old Stage and Balcony. ?fto. 63.—Vol. IT. 1756*.—Court Fool. 1755.—Richard Burbage, 113 114 OLD ENGLAND. riiooK v. to them by the law. And she robbed them in the end of 10,000/.before she would consent to grant them their own. That was inthe year 1601. Soon after she died; and then the fortunes of theHowards brightened. The son of Mary did not forget what theDuke of Norfolk and his children hat! suffered for Marys elder brothers son, Thomas Howard (the collecto
. Old England : a pictorial museum of regal, ecclesiastical, baronial, municipal, and popular antiquities . of the old Stage and Balcony. ?fto. 63.—Vol. IT. 1756*.—Court Fool. 1755.—Richard Burbage, 113 114 OLD ENGLAND. riiooK v. to them by the law. And she robbed them in the end of 10,000/.before she would consent to grant them their own. That was inthe year 1601. Soon after she died; and then the fortunes of theHowards brightened. The son of Mary did not forget what theDuke of Norfolk and his children hat! suffered for Marys elder brothers son, Thomas Howard (the collector of the famousmarbles), was restored to all that had been lost, excepting only:he ducal title; and William Howard was appointed to a post ofhonour in his own native county—the wardenship of the was in this position that his energetic—probably severe—measures obtained for him so dreaded a name that the Scottishmothers are said to have been accustomed to frighten their childrenwith it. It is but right to observe that the constant incursionsof the borderers from one country into
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjecthistoricbuildings