| Agnes Strickland - Princes - 1857 - 380 pages
...own Sovereign had been augmented by the sight of the royal captive, he thus reverts to the latter : " Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colors ;" a piece of information which settles one of the minor subjects of controversy in regard to Mary... | |
| Bannatyne Club (Edinburgh, Scotland) - Scotland - 1863 - 410 pages
...withall an alluring grace, a prety Scottish accente, and a searching wit, clouded with myldnes . . . Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colors. ' —(Mr. T. Wright's Queen Elizabeth and her Times, vol. ip 311.) Brantome, on the other hand, who... | |
| John Hill Burton - Scotland - 1870 - 538 pages
...commencement,' which is a riddle I undertake not." He noticed also that " her hair of itself is Mack, and yet Mr Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colours." Scottish queen's coming into England." Looking to the several probable conclusions, each... | |
| John Hill Burton - Scotland - 1873 - 506 pages
...embroidered, ' En ma fin est mon commencement,' which is a riddle I undertake not." He noticed also that "her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colours. " VOL. IV. 2 B statesman, whose eye looked so much farther into the coming possibilities.... | |
| Great Britain - 1873 - 302 pages
...affection hy seeing the Queen's Majesty our sovereign is doubled, and thereby I guess what sight might work in others. Her hair of itself is black, and yet, Mr. Knollys told me that she weal's hair of sundry colors. In looking upon her cloth of estate I noticed this sentence embroidered... | |
| Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts - Great Britain - 1883 - 758 pages
...affection by seeing the Queen our Sovereign is doubled, and thereby he guesses what sight might work in others. Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told him that she wears hair of sundry colours. He noticed on her cloth of estate this sentence : — En... | |
| Great Britain. Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts - Great Britain - 1883 - 670 pages
...affection by seeing the Queen our Sovereign is doubled, and thereby he guesses whut sight might work in others. Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told him that she wears hair of sundry colours. He noticed on her cloth of estate this sentence: — En... | |
| Lionel Cust - 1903 - 250 pages
...well." Nicholas White, who had an interview with Mary Stuart at Tutbury in February 1569, says that " Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colours." Mary Stuart had, however, but little southern blood in her veins, and was a true daughter... | |
| William Odum - 1904 - 286 pages
...move some to relieve her, and glory joined to gain might stir others to adventure much for her sake Her hair of itself is black, and yet Mr. Knollys told me that she wears hair of sundry colours. In looking upon her cloth of estate [canopy], I noticed this sentence embroidered, En ma fin... | |
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