The Parliamentary Or Constitutional History of England: Being a Faithful Account of All the Most Remarkable Transactions in Parliament, from the Earliest Times. Collected from the Journals of Both Houses, the Records, Original Manuscripts, Scarce Speeches, and Tracts; All Compared Withthe Several Contemporary Writers, and Connected, Throughout, with the History of the Times. By Several Hands...Printed; and sold by T. Osborne; and W. Sandby, 1757 |
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... The Lord hath ' done great Things for us in these Parts , whereof we have great Caufe to be glad , and we are con- fident alfo he is doing great Things for you in England . I fhould enlarge , but must now abruptly break off , the Poft ...
... The Lord hath ' done great Things for us in these Parts , whereof we have great Caufe to be glad , and we are con- fident alfo he is doing great Things for you in England . I fhould enlarge , but must now abruptly break off , the Poft ...
Strana 138
... the great and wonderful Things which God hath wrought for them ; it was Matter of much Grief to the Good and Well - affected of the Land , to obferve the little Progrefs which was made therein , who thereupon applied to the Army ...
... the great and wonderful Things which God hath wrought for them ; it was Matter of much Grief to the Good and Well - affected of the Land , to obferve the little Progrefs which was made therein , who thereupon applied to the Army ...
Strana 158
... these Gentlemen who are here , can tell that we had at the leaft ten < or twelve Meetings , maft humbly begging and " befeeching them that , of their own Accords , they would do thofe good Things that had been pro- mifed ; that fo it ...
... these Gentlemen who are here , can tell that we had at the leaft ten < or twelve Meetings , maft humbly begging and " befeeching them that , of their own Accords , they would do thofe good Things that had been pro- mifed ; that fo it ...
Strana 164
... Thing , when thefe Nations had been ' under the like Hurly - burly and Distractions ; and ' it was confeffed by them , it had been no new Thing . We had been at Labour to get Precedents to convince them of it ; and we told them those Things ...
... Thing , when thefe Nations had been ' under the like Hurly - burly and Distractions ; and ' it was confeffed by them , it had been no new Thing . We had been at Labour to get Precedents to convince them of it ; and we told them those Things ...
Strana 173
... Things , and fo I am perfuaded are yours : Truly , feeing that these Things are fo , that you are at the Edge of the Promifes and Prophecies ; at leaft , if there were neither Promife for this nor Prophefy , you co- vet the best Things ...
... Things , and fo I am perfuaded are yours : Truly , feeing that these Things are fo , that you are at the Edge of the Promifes and Prophecies ; at leaft , if there were neither Promife for this nor Prophefy , you co- vet the best Things ...
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The Parliamentary Or Constitutional History of England: Being a ..., Zväzok 20 Úplné zobrazenie - 1757 |
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Affiftance aforefaid againſt alfo alſo Anfwer appointed Army Auguft becauſe Bill Bleffing Bufinefs Cafe Caufe Cauſe Chrift City Commiffioners Commonwealth Commonwealth of England Confcience Confent Confideration Council County Court Cromwell Declaration Defign defire Diffolution Eftates Election Endeavours Enemy England fafe faid fame feem fent ferve fettled feven feveral fhall fhould fince firft fome fuch Gilbert Pickering give Government hath himſelf Honour Horfe Horſe Houfe Houſe Iffue Inter-regnum Intereft Ireland John Juftice King laft Land liament Liberty likewife Lord Protector Lord-General Major-General ment Mercy Minifters moft Month moſt myfelf neral Number obferved Occafion Officers Oliver Cromwell ordered paffed Parlia Parliament Party Peace Perfons pleafed Power prefent Prifoners Propofals Purpoſe raiſe Reafon refolved refpective reft Regifter Scotland Scots September ſhall thefe thefe Nations thefe Things themſelves therein thereof theſe thofe Thomas thoſe tion Truft unto Weft Whitlocke whofe William Worcester
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Strana 418 - in God, and not forget the Works of God; but ' keep his Commandments. ' This I thought had been a Song and a Work f worthy of England, whereunto you might have * happily invited them, had you had Hearts unto ' it. ' You had this Opportunity fairly delivered un* to you ; and if a Hiftory
Strana 446 - provokes, and falls into the Hands of, the living ' God by fuch Blafphemies as thefe, according to ' the tenth of the Hebrews, If we fin "wilfully after ' that we have received the Knowledge of the Truth, ' there remains no more Sacrifice for Sin. It was.
Strana 315 - done ; and thy Thoughts which are to us ward, they cannot be reckoned up in Order unto thee : If I would declare and fpeak of them, they are more
Strana 322 - At the fame Time alfo we were in a War with France. The Advantages that were taken at the Difcontents and Divifions among ourfelves, did alfo foment that War; and at leaft hinder us of an honourable Peace; every Man being confident we could not hold out long. And furely they did not calculate
Strana 316 - Thing. * What was the Face that was upon our Affairs as to the Intereft of the Nation; to the Authority of the Nation ; to the Magiftracy ; to the Ranks and Orders of Men, whereby England hath been known for hundreds of Years ? A Nobleman, a
Strana 444 - lenge even all that fear God ; and as God hath ' faid, my Glory I will not give unto another ; let * Men take heed, and be twice advifed, how they ' call his Revolutions the Things of God, and his * working of Things from one Period to another,
Strana 445 - are five or fix cunning Men in England that have ' Skill, they do all thefe Things : Oh what Blaf' phemy is this! becaufe Men, that are without God ' in the World, and walk not with him, know ' not what it is to pray, or believe, and to receive
Strana 131 - he had heard fuch unbecoming Language given to ' the Parliament ; and that it was the more horrid ' in that it came from their Servant, and their Ser* vant whom they had fo highly trufted and obliged:" But as he was going on, the General
Strana 352 - needfull ; but I think I need not. I was arbitra* ry in Power, having the Armies in the three Nations under my Command ; and truly not very ill beloved by them, nor very ill beloved then by the People, by the good People ; and I believe I
Strana 165 - I think we have all to lament. Why, * truly you are called by God to rule with him and * for him ; and you are called to be faithful with « the Saints, who have been fomewhat inftrumen