The History of the Reign of Queen Anne, Digested Into Annals: Year the First[-eleventh. Being the Pacifick Year].A. Roper ... and F. Coggan, 1704 - Great Britain |
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Page 5
... taken away by Death , and we , whom it hath pleased God to continue in Life , have laboured to fweeten the bitterness of our Tryals , by a Chriftian and Peaceable Submiffion and Refignation to his Will , And as in Truth and Gratitude we ...
... taken away by Death , and we , whom it hath pleased God to continue in Life , have laboured to fweeten the bitterness of our Tryals , by a Chriftian and Peaceable Submiffion and Refignation to his Will , And as in Truth and Gratitude we ...
Page 6
... the Northward , and fo came in the Commodore's view , whereof one of 12 , and ano- ther of 14 Guns were chafed afhore and burnt , and the 1703 . the third of 10 Guns was taken . 6 The ANNALS of Kirby (Captain) Shot to Death, p.
... the Northward , and fo came in the Commodore's view , whereof one of 12 , and ano- ther of 14 Guns were chafed afhore and burnt , and the 1703 . the third of 10 Guns was taken . 6 The ANNALS of Kirby (Captain) Shot to Death, p.
Page 7
... taken . In the mean time Cap- A. C. tain Vincent with his Boats row'd in the night undifco- ver'd into the Cul , where lay four Ships , whereof the biggest formerly was taken from the English , and was call'd the Selwyn , had her full ...
... taken . In the mean time Cap- A. C. tain Vincent with his Boats row'd in the night undifco- ver'd into the Cul , where lay four Ships , whereof the biggest formerly was taken from the English , and was call'd the Selwyn , had her full ...
Page 9
... taken to opprefs them , more than any of the reft , and by continual Vexations to render them unable to recover their Liberty . The Sieur Bofville , Intendant of Languedoc , and the Sieur Broglio , Commander of the Troops of that ...
... taken to opprefs them , more than any of the reft , and by continual Vexations to render them unable to recover their Liberty . The Sieur Bofville , Intendant of Languedoc , and the Sieur Broglio , Commander of the Troops of that ...
Page 15
... taken , and many indirect Methods made ufe of to procure Subfcriptions to it . That the Toleration petition'd for in that Addrefs , was defign'd to carry on that In- tereft oppofite to that of the Revolution , appears by thefe 1 A. C. ...
... taken , and many indirect Methods made ufe of to procure Subfcriptions to it . That the Toleration petition'd for in that Addrefs , was defign'd to carry on that In- tereft oppofite to that of the Revolution , appears by thefe 1 A. C. ...
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Popular passages
Page 19 - ... that if any person of the age of sixteen years or upwards, being a subject of this realm, at any time after the tenth day of May next,1 shall be present at any assembly, conventicle or meeting under colour or pretence of any exercise of religion in other manner than according to the liturgy and practice of the Church of England...
Page 20 - Corporations, or having accepted any office, civil or military, or any place of trust under the Crown, to receive the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper according to the Rites of the Church of England.
Page 19 - Lord's Supper, according to the Ufage of the Church of England, within...
Page 159 - Fortunes (hall ever be ready to defend you up' on all occafions, and your Majefty may therefore * with the greater Safety and Glory, fend your ' Fleets and Armies abroad in the defence of your ' Allies. ' The happy Declaration of the Duke of Savoy * for the Common Intereft, gives your Majefty a...
Page 46 - Realms, unless a free Communication of Trade, the Freedom of Navigation, and the Liberty of the Plantations...
Page 202 - York, is without president and unwarrantable, and tends to the subjecting the rights and properties of all the commons of England to an illegal and arbitrary power...
Page 83 - An Argument, proving, that according to the Covenant of Eternal Life, revealed in the Scriptures, Man may be translated from hence into that Eternal Life, without passing through Death, although the Human Nature of Christ himself could not be thus translated till he had passed through Death ; 1703.
Page 6 - The last nine miles of the way cost us six hours' time to conquer them ; and indeed we had never done it, if our good master had not several times lent us a pair of horses out of his own coach, whereby we were enabled to trace out the way for him.
Page 10 - Fellow-Subjefts enjoy, is very plain and evident by the Exceptions of iuch Perfons as are only exempted from being forced from their Country, their Wives and their Children, into Foreign Service : The Perfons only excepted, I find, are Clergymen, the Scholars of the Two Univerfities, the Students of the Inns of Court...
Page 27 - Rothes recommended another, importing, that, after her Majefty's death, and failing heirs of her body, no perfon coming to the Crown of Scotland, being at the fame time King or Queen of England, fhould, as King or Queen of Scotland, have power to make peace or war without the confent of Parliament.