The World's Great Classics1899 |
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... Parliament such as this Crom- well might well trust to make the nation itself through its very representatives an accomplice in the work of absolutism . It was by parliamentary statutes that the Church was prostrated at the feet of the ...
... Parliament such as this Crom- well might well trust to make the nation itself through its very representatives an accomplice in the work of absolutism . It was by parliamentary statutes that the Church was prostrated at the feet of the ...
Página 47
... Parliament to restore Catholicism in Scotland ; and to secure the banishment of Murray and his companions . The English Catholics of the North were ready to revolt as soon as she was ready to aid them . No such danger had ever ...
... Parliament to restore Catholicism in Scotland ; and to secure the banishment of Murray and his companions . The English Catholics of the North were ready to revolt as soon as she was ready to aid them . No such danger had ever ...
Página 68
... Parliament was a purely political one , and whose attitude towards the Crown was far bolder and more independent than that of the quiet tradesmen who pre- ceded them . So changed , indeed , was the tone of the Com- mons , even as early ...
... Parliament was a purely political one , and whose attitude towards the Crown was far bolder and more independent than that of the quiet tradesmen who pre- ceded them . So changed , indeed , was the tone of the Com- mons , even as early ...
Página 69
... Parliament ; but as soon as she perceived the House was bent upon his restoration the command was withdrawn . On the other hand , the Commons still shrank from any con- sistent repudiation of Elizabeth's assumption of control over ...
... Parliament ; but as soon as she perceived the House was bent upon his restoration the command was withdrawn . On the other hand , the Commons still shrank from any con- sistent repudiation of Elizabeth's assumption of control over ...
Página 70
... Parliamentary enactments , Elizabeth , like the rest of the Tudor sovereigns , theoretically held her ecclesiastical supremacy to be a purely personal power , with her administration of which neither Parliament nor even her Council had ...
... Parliamentary enactments , Elizabeth , like the rest of the Tudor sovereigns , theoretically held her ecclesiastical supremacy to be a purely personal power , with her administration of which neither Parliament nor even her Council had ...
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alliance army became bill bishops broke brought Catholic Catholicism Charles Church civil clergy Council Court Cromwell Cromwell's Crown Danby danger death Declaration of Indulgence declared demand Duke Dutch Earl ecclesiastical Elizabeth England English Exclusion Bill Faerie Queen fell Flanders fleet force France freedom French fresh gave hand Henry Holland hope House of Commons Ireland Irish Jacobite James King King's land Laud leaders liberty London Long Parliament Lord Louis Marlborough Mary ment ministers nation nobles officers Parlia Parliament party passed passion peace persecution Philip political Presbyterian Prince Prince of Orange Protestant Protestantism Puritan Queen reform refused reign religion religious resolved Restoration revolt roused royal royalist Scotch Scotland secure seemed Shaftesbury Shakspere soldiers soon Spain Spanish spite stood struggle succession temper Test Act thousand throne tion Tory Treaty triumph victory Whigs William worship