An Historical and Critical Account of the Lives and Writings of James I. and Charles I. and of the Lives of Oliver Cromwell and Charles II...: From Original Writers and State-papers, Volume 5F.C. and J. Rivington, 1814 |
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Page 20
... received by them : " but , at the same time , it is confessed , " that when there was no remedy , and that he was actually landed , no man paid him so much reverence and outward respect , and gave so good an example to all others , with ...
... received by them : " but , at the same time , it is confessed , " that when there was no remedy , and that he was actually landed , no man paid him so much reverence and outward respect , and gave so good an example to all others , with ...
Page 47
... received any money to enable her to be liberal to any of those who had attended her out of their own coun- try , and promised themselves places of great advantage in her family . And she earnestly desired the king , that she might ...
... received any money to enable her to be liberal to any of those who had attended her out of their own coun- try , and promised themselves places of great advantage in her family . And she earnestly desired the king , that she might ...
Page 49
... received with the most sensible indignation , and was commonly provoked with it most by those who intended most to govern him ) had now vanquished , or suppressed , all those tendernesses and reluctances , and appeared every day more ...
... received with the most sensible indignation , and was commonly provoked with it most by those who intended most to govern him ) had now vanquished , or suppressed , all those tendernesses and reluctances , and appeared every day more ...
Page 64
... received from Christ , they were the judges even of the scripture itself many years after the apos- tles , which books were canonical and which were not . And if they had this power then , I desire to know , how they came to lose it ...
... received from Christ , they were the judges even of the scripture itself many years after the apos- tles , which books were canonical and which were not . And if they had this power then , I desire to know , how they came to lose it ...
Page 73
... received his catho- lick subjects with the same grace and frankness that he did his other : and they took all opportunities to extól their own sufferings , which they would have un- derstood to have been for him . And some very noble ...
... received his catho- lick subjects with the same grace and frankness that he did his other : and they took all opportunities to extól their own sufferings , which they would have un- derstood to have been for him . And some very noble ...
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act of parliament Act of Uniformity affairs afterwards ambassador appear army authority believe bill bishop brought Burnet catholics Christian church Church of England Clarendon Clarendon's Continuation clergy command concerned confess court crown D'Estrades Danby declared designs desired discourse duchess duchess of Portsmouth duke of York Dutch earl endeavour England favour French friends give Grey's Debates guards hands hath Holland honour house of commons house of lords judges justice king Charles king of France king's kingdom letter liament liberty Lond London lord lordship majesty majesty's manner matter ment ministers nation never oath obliged observed occasion papists parliament passed peace pension persons perswade pope popery popish popish plot pretended prince protestant queen reason reign religion resolved royal ruin says sent shew subjects suffered tell thing thought thousand pounds tion told Tryal write