Memorials of the Stuart Dynasty: Including the Constitutional and Ecclesiastical History of England, from the Decease of Elizabeth to the Abdication of James II.Holdsworth and Ball, 1831 |
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Seite iii
... CATHOLICS FROM 1629 TO 1640 . Alarm with regard to Popery at this time not unreasonable . — Circumstances which conduced to its Progress . - Advantage given to its Advocates by the Court Clergy . - Policy of Charles in relation to Catholics ...
... CATHOLICS FROM 1629 TO 1640 . Alarm with regard to Popery at this time not unreasonable . — Circumstances which conduced to its Progress . - Advantage given to its Advocates by the Court Clergy . - Policy of Charles in relation to Catholics ...
Seite viii
... Catholics - The Quakers - their Sufferings . - Scotland and Ireland . - Poverty of the King - his Marriage . - Sale of Dunkirk . -Act of Uniformity - the Act enforced - Injustice and Cruelty of that Measure . - Motives of the ...
... Catholics - The Quakers - their Sufferings . - Scotland and Ireland . - Poverty of the King - his Marriage . - Sale of Dunkirk . -Act of Uniformity - the Act enforced - Injustice and Cruelty of that Measure . - Motives of the ...
Seite ix
... Catholic Religion and Arbitrary Power . - Nature of the Concealed Compact between Charles and Louis . - Parliament.- Impeachment of the Earl of Ossory . - Dispute with regard to the Jurisdiction of the Peers . - The Nonconformists - a ...
... Catholic Religion and Arbitrary Power . - Nature of the Concealed Compact between Charles and Louis . - Parliament.- Impeachment of the Earl of Ossory . - Dispute with regard to the Jurisdiction of the Peers . - The Nonconformists - a ...
Seite 1
... CATHOLICS FROM 1629 TO 1640 . ALARM WITH REGARD TO POPERY AT THIS TIME NOT UNREASONABLE .-- CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH CONDUCED ... catholic faith had frequently taken place . It is true , they were almost confined VOL . II . B XII . 1629-1640 ...
... CATHOLICS FROM 1629 TO 1640 . ALARM WITH REGARD TO POPERY AT THIS TIME NOT UNREASONABLE .-- CIRCUMSTANCES WHICH CONDUCED ... catholic faith had frequently taken place . It is true , they were almost confined VOL . II . B XII . 1629-1640 ...
Seite 3
... catholic opinions , though they profess it not with open mouth , for fear of the puritans : For example , they hold ... CATHOLICS . 3.
... catholic opinions , though they profess it not with open mouth , for fear of the puritans : For example , they hold ... CATHOLICS . 3.
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Beliebte Passagen
Seite 476 - I can never forget the inexpressible luxury and profaneness, gaming, and all dissoluteness, and as it were total forgetfulness of God, (it being Sunday evening,) which this day se'nnight I was witness of, the King sitting and toying with his concubines, Portsmouth, Cleveland, and...
Seite 83 - I know no reason but you may as well rule the common lawyers in England as I, poor beagle, do here ; and yet that I do, and will do, in all that concerns my master, at the peril of my head.
Seite 307 - Most of the company gone, and I going, I heard by a gentleman of a sermon that was to be there ; and so I staid to hear it, thinking it serious, till by and by the gentleman told me it was a mockery by one Cornet Bolton, a very gentleman-like man, that behind a chair did pray and preach like a Presbyter Scot, with all the possible imitation in grimaces and voice.
Seite 57 - The word goes in haste to the lord lieutenant, where he was with the king; with speed he comes to the house ; he calls rudely at the door; James Maxwell, keeper of the black rod, opens : his lordship, with a proud glooming countenance, makes towards his place at the board head...
Seite 505 - Richard, Richard, dost thou think we'll hear thee poison the court? Richard, thou art an old fellow, an old knave; thou hast written books enough to load a cart, every one as full of sedition, I might say treason, as an egg is full of meat. Hadst thou been whipped out of thy writing trade forty years ago, it had been happy.
Seite 221 - ... yielded a harvest of extraordinary good and sound knowledge in all parts of learning ; and many who were wickedly introduced applied themselves to the study of good learning and the practice of virtue, and had...
Seite 204 - If your majesty have a game to play, you must give us also the liberty to play ours.
Seite 249 - ... of unlearned and erroneous men that favoured antinomianism or anabaptism, yet, to give them their due, they did abundance of good to the church. They saved many a congregation from ignorant, ungodly, drunken teachers, that sort of men...
Seite 502 - I will conform to the liturgy of the Church of England as it is now by law established.