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He died August 30, 1580. She became Queen of England in 1553. On July 25, 1554, she married Philip II. of Spain, and from this time on her energies were directed to the destruction of Protestantism in England. Her death took place on November 17, 1558. She ascended the English throne in 1558.

In 1851 the French Academy awarded him a prize for his work "Un Philosophe sous les Toits." In 1853 he was invited by Vinet to visit Switzerland in order to deliver a series of popular lectures on literature, which were received with great favor. Soon after his return to Paris he died, July 5, 1854.

After the accession of Philip II. to the throne of Spain, the war against the French was carried on with varying success for seven years. In 1558, after the Battle of Gravelines, proposals of peace were made and the treaty was signed at Câteau-Cambrésis, April 3, 1559. Henry II. was shortly after wounded in a tournament, and died on July 10, 1559.

DON CARLOS, son of Philip II. of Spain and of his first wife, Doña Maria of Portugal, was born at Valladolid on July 8, 1545, and died at Madrid on July 14, 1568. In 1559, at the Treaty of Câteau-Cambrésis, Philip negotiated a marriage between his son and Elisabeth, daughter of Henry II., but he afterwards married the princess himself.

Je prie Votre Excellence de vouloir bien m'accuser réception de cette lettre, etc. 14° Lord Palmerston au baron de Bourqueney. Foreign office. July 22, 1839. Monsieur le Baron,

In an article which appeared in "Les Annales," July 6, 1913, Charles Le Goffic tells of a visit to the house in Tarascon known as la maison de Tartarin, and reports a conversation he had with Mistral, the great Provençal poet, an intimate friend of Daudet.

Proceedings of a general court Martial, for the trial of major-general Lee. July, 1778. Cooperstown, 1823. Vie de Charles Lee, pages 227-229, pour la lettre de Joseph Reed. Vie de Washington, par Irving, II, 284. Sparks, vol.

The Early Life of Thomas Carlyle, by J. A. FROUDE. The Nineteenth Century. July, 1881. § 3.

La vieille, dans son verre, noya son émotion. Deux jours avant, reprit-elle, j'étais venue lui faire les ongles, ici, car c'était sa chambre. Sur le mur, près de la fenêtre, avec son canif, il écrivait dans la pierre quelque chose. Regarde, ça se voit encore. Was it not Fate, that, on this July midnight...

Cunningham, 17th July 1788; To Rev. Mais alors, c'était le sacrifice de tout un avenir, juste entrevu pour être regretté! C'était perdre la femme élégante, spirituelle, instruite, qui lui avait fait comprendre le charme et le bienfait d'une existence vraiment partagée, celle qu'il croyait aimer, qu'il aimait peut-être et qui avait encore tout le mystère de la non-possession. C'était déchirer le plus brillant rêve qu'il eût fait, mettre en lambeaux une vague et indéfinie évocation de bonheur. C'était entraver l'indépendance d'allures, la fantaisie de travail, les changements de résidence, l'humeur capricieuse, utiles