United States or Malaysia ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


Twas not don well to brand my spotles name With Infamy; but to deride me is Inhumaine, when I only come to tell you Ile send my prayers on charities white wings To heaven for your prosperity. You greive For what? for your deliverance from a strumpet? Bon. No, but that my raving fancy should direct My trecherous tongue with that detested name To afflict thy unblemishd purity, Belisea.

That it is unfinished, I greive; yet fear that from me, it will always remain so; that as far as it is carried, it should be so trifling and so unworthy of you, is another concern to your obliged humble Servant The Author Messrs Demand and Co please to pay Jane Austen Spinster the sum of one hundred guineas on account of your Humble Servant. H. T. Austen

Onely we hope His Maiestie will give us leave to say We greive that he is misinformd of us And our proceedings, of which we hereafter Will give him certaine and unanswerable proofes To iustefie our Actions, which we will Make knowne to all the world; till when we wish He will be pleasd to give way to the States To finish what they have begon, with Justice Temperd with mercy; and that your good Lordships Will give his Grace to understand thus much, If with the generall voice you doe approve it.

And that you may know, How ere his mallice live to me, all hatred Is dead in me to him, I am a Suitour He may be sent for; for, as Barnavelt is A member of this body politique, I honour him, and will not scorne to yeild A strict accompt of all my Actions to him; And, though my Enemie, while he continues A frend to his owne fame and loyall to The State, I love him and shall greive that he, When he falls from it must deserve my pitty.

That it is unfinished, I greive; yet fear that from me, it will always remain so; that as far as it is carried, it should be so trifling and so unworthy of you, is another concern to your obliged humble Servant The Author Messrs Demand and Co please to pay Jane Austen Spinster the sum of one hundred guineas on account of your Humble Servant. H. T. Austen

The two Panias who Came here a fiew days ago was imediately Sent home, for fear of their being put to death by the party Defeated Two of the attacting party was Known to be Panies. The man who was killed mentioned that after he was wounded, that he had been at war & been wounded, "this day I shall die like a man before my Enimies,! tell my father that I died bravely, and do not greive for me-"