A History of the Tory Party, 1640-1714 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 31
... peace , we honour , reverence , and obey in the very next degree unto God the voice of the Church of God wherein we live . ' 1 But who should declare and sanction this voice ? Who , surely , but the supreme governor ' , the overruler ...
... peace , we honour , reverence , and obey in the very next degree unto God the voice of the Church of God wherein we live . ' 1 But who should declare and sanction this voice ? Who , surely , but the supreme governor ' , the overruler ...
Page 37
... peace and happiness depended , he would let no individual right stand in the way : the ground whereupon government stands will not so easily be washed away . ' If he insisted once and again that Ship - money should only be asked for ...
... peace and happiness depended , he would let no individual right stand in the way : the ground whereupon government stands will not so easily be washed away . ' If he insisted once and again that Ship - money should only be asked for ...
Page 43
... peace , peace ' and striving with a heavy heart to master all things in heaven and earth . " ་ The oldest of these contending forces was what , for want of a better expression , may be called the Catholicism of England . Round the ...
... peace , peace ' and striving with a heavy heart to master all things in heaven and earth . " ་ The oldest of these contending forces was what , for want of a better expression , may be called the Catholicism of England . Round the ...
Page 55
... peace ' , could write , eighteen months later , that admirable letter to Jermyn , bidding Charles reconcile his people not ' by any little acts , but by royal and kingly resolutions ' .1 " But Suckling's sophiscated wit voiced only the ...
... peace ' , could write , eighteen months later , that admirable letter to Jermyn , bidding Charles reconcile his people not ' by any little acts , but by royal and kingly resolutions ' .1 " But Suckling's sophiscated wit voiced only the ...
Page 59
... peace was worth all other things . In the preface prefixed to his poems in 1656 he speaks of his determination to flee to America , and wishes that neither party should make a kind of artificial memory of those things wherein we are all ...
... peace was worth all other things . In the preface prefixed to his poems in 1656 he speaks of his determination to flee to America , and wishes that neither party should make a kind of artificial memory of those things wherein we are all ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Anglesey April army B. M. Add Ballard MSS Barillon bill bishops Bodl Bolingbroke Bromley Buckingham Burnet Cabinet Carmarthen Catholic Cavalier Chancellor Charles Church of England Clarendon Clarges Commons constitutional Corr Council Court Coventry Coxe Crown Danby Danby's Dartmouth December declared Dissenters Duke Dutch election English Finch Foley Foxcroft France friends Godolphin Grey Halifax Hanoverian Harcourt Harley Harley's Hatton Corr Henry Coventry House Hyde ibid impeachment Jacobite James July June King King's Klopp leaders letter London Lord Lord-Lieutenant loyal March Marlborough ment ministers Ministry moderate monarchy Montague Musgrave never Newcastle Non-jurors Nottingham November Ormonde papers Oxford Parliament party passim peace political Portland Presbyterian Prince Privy prorogation Protestant Puritan Queen refused reign Reresby Restoration Revolution Rochester royal Royalist Secretary Sept session Seymour Shrewsbury Somers Sunderland Swift tion Tory Treasurer treaty Triennial Bills vote Wharton Whig William wrote