Începuturile dentisticei in ţările româneşti / [G.Z. Petrescu].
- Petrescu, G. Z. (Gheorghe Zaharia), 1874-1954.
- Date:
- 1934
Licence: In copyright
Credit: Începuturile dentisticei in ţările româneşti / [G.Z. Petrescu]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![“ 8. As, of the other side, hoth her highnes, of lier certeine knowledge, & we [to] do his lordship but right, of our synceare consciences must needs affirme these strange & abhominable crymes to be raised of a wicked & venomous malice against the said erle; of whose good service, sinceritie of religion, & all other faithfull dealinges towards her majestie & the realme, we have had longe and true experience. “ 9. Which things considered, & withall knowinge yt to be an usuall trad of traiterous mynds, when they wold render the princes government odious, to detract & bringe out of creditt the princypall persons about them, her highnes, taking the abuse to be offered to her owne selfe, hath commanded us to notifie the same unto you; to thend that, knowinge her good pleasure, you maie proceed therein as in a matter highlie towchinge her owne estate & honnor. “10. And therefore we wish & requier you to have regard thereof accordinglie, that the former necligence & remisseness shewed in the execution of her majesties commandement maie be amended by the dili- gence & severitie that shalbe hereafter used. Which amendment & care- fulnes in this cause chieflie her majestie assuredlie lookethe for, & will call for accompte of, at all your hands. “11. And so wee bid you hartelie farewell. From the courte at Greenewich this xx. of June, 1585. “ Your very lovinge frends, “T. Bromley, Canc. W. Burghley Geo. Shrewsbury H. Derby F. Bedford C. Haward J. Hunsdon F. Knollys H. Sydney Chr. Hatton Fr. Walsingham Wal. Myldmay.” “ To our verie good lords, the lord Strange, and the bishoppe of Chester; and to our lovinge frends the rest of the justices of the peace in the counties of Lancaster & Chester. That suspicions injurious to Dudleys lionour and cha- racter were rife in the neighbourhood at the time of his wife s death is most certain ; he himself was evidently alive to them from the manner in which, in his letters to Blount, he writes of the “untoward accident f “ what the malicious world will bruyte;” “the malicious talke that I knowe the wicked world will use,” etc. So also in a letter by Thomas Lever, an eminent puritan preacher, a prebendary of Durham, and master of Sherborne hospital, who wrote from Coventry to sir William Cecil, and also to sir Francis Knollys, of the](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30629895_0204.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)