The Parliamentary Or Constitutional History of England;: From the Earliest Times, to the Restoration of King Charles II. Collected from the Records, ... |
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Términos y frases comunes
according Account againſt agreed alſo Anſwer appear appointed Authority Cauſe Charge City coming Command Commiſſioners Committee Commons concerning confident Conſent Council Country Covenant defire delivered deſire diſpoſed Earl Endeavours Ends engaged England Examinant expect Fairfax fame firſt Forces further give given Hands hath Honourable hope Houſes of Parliament humble Intentions Intereſt Ireland John joint June King King's Kingdom of England Kingdom of Scotland land laſt late Letter Liberties London Lords Lordſhips Majeſty Majeſty's March Means ment Money Months moſt Name Newcaſtle Officers ordered particular Peace Perſon Petition Place pleaſed Power preſent preſerve Proceedings Quarters Queſtion raiſed Reaſons received relation Religion remove Reſolutions Right Safety ſaid ſame Satisfaction Scots Army ſent Servants Service ſeveral ſhall ſhould Soldiers ſome Speaker Subjects ſuch taken themſelves therein thereof theſe Things thoſe thought tion Treaty unto Votes whole
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Página 402 - Solemn League and Covenant for Reformation, and Defence of Religion, the Honour and Happinefs of the King ; and the Peace and Safety of the three Kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland.
Página 430 - [As] for the thing we insist upon as Englishmen, — and surely our being Soldiers hath not stript us of that interest, although our malicious enemies would have it so, — we desire a Settlement of the Peace of the Kingdom and of the Liberties of the Subject...
Página 364 - So that it was privately refolv'd by the principal Perfons of the Houfe of Commons, that when he came the next Day into the Houfe, which he feldom omitted to do, they would fend him to the Tower ; prefuming, that if they had once...
Página 25 - Armies,6 by his own absolute will, against or without his Council of War, against many commands of the Committee of Both Kingdoms, and with contempt and vilifying of those commands ; — and, since the conjunction, sometimes against the Councils of War, and sometimes by persuading and deluding the Council to neglect one opportunity with pretence of another, and this again of a third, and at last by persuading ' them' that it was not fit to fight at all...
Página 422 - Engagement of the Army under the Command of his Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax, read, assented unto, and Subscribed by all Officers, and Souldiers of the several Regiments, at the general Rendezvous near New-Market, on the 5th of June, 1647," in Rushworth's " Historical Collections,
Página 363 - And in these, and the like discourses, when he spake of the nation's being to be involved in new troubles, he would weep bitterly, and appear the most afflicted man in the world with the sense of the calamities which were like to ensue.
Página 243 - ... of the parliaments, and the liberties of the kingdoms, and to preferve and defend the king's...
Página 364 - Horfe, and from whence he writ a Letter to the Houfe of Commons, *• That having the Night before receiv'da Letter from fome Officers of his own Regiment, that the Jealoufy the Troops had conceiv'd of him, and of his Want of Kindnefs towards them, was much abated, fo that they...
Página 363 - ... in blood, he was rendered so odious unto them, that they had a purpose to kill him, if, upon some discovery made to him, he had not escaped out of their hands.
Página 122 - Lord the King of Spain, and the Lords the States General of the United Provinces of the Low Countries, as...