The History of England from the Accessiòn of James II, 2, Nide 3Phillips Sampson, 1853 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 97
Sivu 2
... took the lead on this occasion , and seemed to have the royal ear . It was a circum- stance not less significant that no previous communication was made to Barillon . Both he and his master were taken by surprise . Lewis was much ...
... took the lead on this occasion , and seemed to have the royal ear . It was a circum- stance not less significant that no previous communication was made to Barillon . Both he and his master were taken by surprise . Lewis was much ...
Sivu 9
... took a course which convinced the most enlightened and tolerant Protestants of his time , that those disabilities were essential to the safety of the state . To his policy the English Roman Catholics owed three years of lawless and ...
... took a course which convinced the most enlightened and tolerant Protestants of his time , that those disabilities were essential to the safety of the state . To his policy the English Roman Catholics owed three years of lawless and ...
Sivu 13
... took the side of religious liberty , and loudly reprobated the cruelty of turning a savage and licentious soldiery loose on an unoffending people . * One cry of grief and rage rose from the whole of Protestant Europe . The tidings of ...
... took the side of religious liberty , and loudly reprobated the cruelty of turning a savage and licentious soldiery loose on an unoffending people . * One cry of grief and rage rose from the whole of Protestant Europe . The tidings of ...
Sivu 15
... took the same side . The feeling of the House could not be mistaken . Sir John Ernley , chancellor of the Ex- chequer , insisted that the delay should not exceed forty - eight hours : but he was overruled ; and it was resolved that the ...
... took the same side . The feeling of the House could not be mistaken . Sir John Ernley , chancellor of the Ex- chequer , insisted that the delay should not exceed forty - eight hours : but he was overruled ; and it was resolved that the ...
Sivu 18
... , to be as dangerous to the just authority of princes as to the liberty of nations . Sir John Maynard , the most learned lawyer of his time , took part in the The debate . He was now more than eighty years old 18 HISTORY OF ENGLAND .
... , to be as dangerous to the just authority of princes as to the liberty of nations . Sir John Maynard , the most learned lawyer of his time , took part in the The debate . He was now more than eighty years old 18 HISTORY OF ENGLAND .
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Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Adda Anglican answer appeared army Barillon Bishop Bonrepaux Burnet chancellor character Charles chief Church of England Church of Rome Churchmen Citters civil Clarendon to Rochester clergy command Commons conscience court courtiers crown declared dispensing power Dissenters divine Dykvelt Earl ecclesiastical eminent enemies English Exclusion Bill favor feelings France Halifax honor hope House Indulgence Ireland Irish James the Second Jeffreys Jesuits July June king King's Bench letter Lewis liberty London Gazette lord lieutenant Luttrell's Diary majesty Memoirs ment mind minister never Oxford Papists parliament party person political Popery Popish prince Prince of Orange privy council prorogation Protestant Puritan refused regarded religion religious Rochester Roman Catholic royal Rye House Plot scarcely soon sovereign spirit statutes strong suffered Sunderland temper Test Act thought thousand pounds tion took Tory Tyrconnel Whigs Whitehall whole William zealous